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Three noteworthy idiosyncrasies related to Canada's opioid‐death crisis, and implications for public health‐oriented interventions

Benedikt Fischer, Tessa Robinson, Didier Jutras‐Aswad

2023Drug and Alcohol Review13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Canada has been experiencing a prolonged public health‐crisis of high rates of overdose deaths caused by exceptionally potent/toxic, illicit opioid use. While many key features of this drug death epidemic are well‐documented, several idiosyncratic aspects with relevance for public health‐oriented interventions are not adequately recognised. These include: (i) the discrepant opioid patterns pan‐Canada, with large majorities of opioid deaths caused by illicit fentanyl drugs in Western, but not Eastern regions where prescription‐type opioid prevail; (ii) the environments of overdose deaths, where vast majorities occur in ‘residential’ or other shelter‐type settings, presenting barriers for emergency interventions rather than health protection; and (iii) shifting drug use modes, where now majorities of overdose deaths are associated with drug ‘inhalation’ (instead of ‘injection’) in contexts of potent/toxic drug supply. We briefly describe these factors and related implications for intervention programming towards an improved response to the drug death‐crisis.

Topics & Concepts

Psychological interventionPublic healthMedicineIntervention (counseling)Drug overdoseOpioidOpioid overdoseFentanylMedical prescriptionDrugPsychiatryEnvironmental healthPoison controlPharmacology(+)-NaloxoneNursingReceptorInternal medicineOpioid Use Disorder TreatmentPrenatal Substance Exposure EffectsPoisoning and overdose treatments
Three noteworthy idiosyncrasies related to Canada's opioid‐death crisis, and implications for public health‐oriented interventions | Litcius