Evidence of meeting #24 for Health in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was opioid.

A video is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Jeff Blackmer  Vice-President, Medical Professionalism, Canadian Medical Association
Alistair Bursey  Chair, Canadian Pharmacists Association
Réjean Leclerc  Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)
Chris Coleman  Representative, International Association of Fire Fighters Local 18 and Vancouver Fire Fighters' Union - Local 18
Philip Emberley  Director, Professional Affairs, Canadian Pharmacists Association
Lee Lax  Representative, International Association of Fire Fighters Local 18 and Vancouver Fire Fighters' Union - Local 18

8:45 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

I call our meeting to order. I want to welcome our guests.

I want to welcome Ms. Kwan as the replacement for Don Davies. I want to thank our vice-chair for chairing the last couple of meetings. I appreciate your co-operation there. I also want to thank you for tabling that petition yesterday in the interest of seniors.

Now, we're going to continue our study on opioids and the opioid crisis. We have some guests this morning. They're going to make presentations. Each party has 10 minutes for an opening statement, then we'll switch to questions.

First of all, I'm going to introduce the Canadian Medical Association and Dr. Jeff Blackmer, vice-president of medical professionalism. We also have the Canadian Pharmacists Association with Alistair Bursey, chair of the board. We have Réjean Leclerc, the president of the Montreal-Laval paramedics' association. I want to thank you all for coming.

We have the Vancouver Fire Fighters' Union Local 18. Chris Coleman's a firefighter, and Lee Lax is a firefighter. Thank you very much for coming.

We'll start with the Canadian Medical Association. You have 10 minutes.

8:45 a.m.

Dr. Jeff Blackmer Vice-President, Medical Professionalism, Canadian Medical Association

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I'm Dr. Jeff Blackmer, the vice-president of medical professionalism for the Canadian Medical Association. On behalf of the CMA, I would first like to commend the committee for initiating this emergency study of the public health crisis in Canada. As the national organization representing over 83,000 Canadian doctors, the CMA has an instrumental role in collaborating with other health care stakeholders, governments, and patient organizations in addressing the opioid crisis in our country.

On behalf of Canada's doctors, the CMA is deeply concerned with the escalating public health crisis related to problematic opioid and fentanyl use. Physicians are on the front lines of this epidemic in many respects. We are responsible for supporting patients with the management of acute and chronic pain. Policy-makers must also recognize that prescription opioids are an essential tool in the alleviation of this pain and suffering, especially in palliative and cancer care.

The CMA has, for a long time, been concerned with the harms associated with opioid use. We appeared before this committee as part of its 2013 study on the government's role in addressing prescription drug abuse. At the time, we made a number of recommendations on the potential role of government, some of which I will reiterate for the committee today.

Since then, the CMA has also taken a number of actions to contribute to Canada's response to the opioid crisis. These actions have included advancing the physician perspective in all active government consultations.

In addition to the 2013 study by the health committee, we have also participated in the 2014 ministerial round table and recent regulatory consultations led by Health Canada. Specifically, we have contributed input on tamper-resistant technology for drugs and the delisting of naloxone for the prevention of overdose deaths in the community.

Other actions that we've undertaken have included undertaking physician polling to better understand their experiences with prescribing opioids, developing and disseminating a new policy on addressing the harms associated with opioids and other prescription medications, supporting the development of continuing medical education resources and tools for physicians, supporting the national prescription drug drop-off days, and hosting a physician education session as part of our annual meeting in 2015.

I'm also pleased to report that the CMA has recently joined the executive council of the First Do No Harm strategy, which, as you know, is coordinated by the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse. In addition, we have joined seven leading stakeholders as part of a consortium formed this year to collaborate on addressing the issue from a medical and clinical standpoint.

It's important for the committee to recognize that inappropriate prescribing of opioids is not the sole contributing factor to our current crisis and that targeting this issue alone will not lead to a resolution of the problem. However, physicians must accept our share of the responsibility, and we are prepared to play our part in doing what is necessary to move forward in addressing this very complex and multi-faceted problem.

I'll now turn briefly to the CMA's recommendations for the committee's consideration. These are grouped into four major theme areas, the first of which is harm reduction.

Addiction needs to be recognized and treated as a serious, chronic, and relapsing medical condition for which there are effective current treatments. Despite the fact that there is broad recognition that we are in a public health crisis, the focus of the federal national anti-drug strategy is still heavily skewed towards a criminal justice approach rather than a public health approach. In its current form, the strategy does not adequately address the determinants of drug use, treat addictions, or reduce the harms associated with drug use. The CMA strongly recommends that the federal government review the national anti-drug strategy and reinstate harm reduction as a core pillar of the strategy.

Supervised consumption sites are an important part of a harm reduction program that must be considered as part of an overall strategy to address the harms associated with opioid use. The availability of supervised consumption sites, as you know, is still highly limited in Canada. The CMA maintains its concerns that the new criteria established by the Respect for Communities Act are overly burdensome and deter the establishment of new sites. We continue to recommend that the act be repealed or, at the least, significantly amended to address this issue.

The second theme I will raise is the need to expand treatment options and services. Treatment options and services for both addiction as well as pain management are very under-resourced in Canada.

This includes substitution treatments such as suboxone and methadone, as well as services that help patients taper off opioids or counsel them with intervention such as cognitive behavioural therapy. Availability and access of these resources vary significantly by jurisdiction and region. The federal government has a role to play in prioritizing the expansion of these services across the country. The CMA recommends that the federal government deliver additional funding on an emergency basis to significantly expand the availability and access to addiction treatment as well as pain management programs.

The third theme I will raise for the committee's consideration is the need for greater investment in both prescriber as well as patient education resources. For prescribers, this includes continuing education modules as well as training curricula at all levels of the medical continuum. We need to ensure the availability of unbiased and evidence-based educational programs in opioid-prescribing, pain management, and the management of addictions. Furthermore, support for the development of educational tools and resources, based on the new clinical guidelines that will be released early next year, will play a very important role in the overall approach.

Patient and public education on the harms associated with opioid usage is critical. As such, the CMA recommends that the federal government deliver new funding to support the availability and provision of education and training resources, not just for prescribers but for patients and the public as well.

Finally, to support optimal prescribing, it's critical that prescribers be provided with access to a real-time prescription-monitoring program. Such a program would allow physicians to review a patient's prescription history for multiple health services at the point of care, prior to prescribing medications. Real-time prescription-monitoring is currently only available in two jurisdictions in Canada.

Before closing, I should emphasize that the negative impacts associated with prescription opioids represent a complex issue that will require a multi-faceted, multi-stakeholder response. A key challenge for public policy-makers and prescribers is to mitigate the harms associated with prescription opioid use without negatively affecting patient access to the appropriate treatment for their clinical conditions. As one CMA past president said, the unfortunate reality is that there is no silver bullet solution, and no one group or government can address this issue alone.

The physicians of Canada are committed to being part of the solution.

Thank you very much.

8:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Thank you.

Now we'll go to the Canadian Pharmacists Association. I missed Dr. Emberley in my introductions, so I apologize for that.

Go ahead, please.

8:50 a.m.

Alistair Bursey Chair, Canadian Pharmacists Association

Good morning, everyone. Thank you for the opportunity to be here today.

My name is Alistair Bursey. I am a pharmacist in Fredericton, New Brunswick.

I'm here to speak with you about the growing problem of opioid addiction in our communities from the perspective of a practitioner at the front line of an urgent public health crisis. I'm also the chair of the Canadian Pharmacists Association, the CPhA, which is the national voice of Canada's 40,000 pharmacists. I'm joined today by my colleague Phil Emberley who serves as CPhA's director of professional affairs and also works as a community pharmacist here in Ottawa.

I want to begin by thanking the members of this committee for convening this emergency study. There is no question that opioid abuse is fast becoming a Canadian epidemic, and we need strong leadership in this country to stem the tide. Phil and I can tell you that not only are pharmacists the experts when it comes to medication but that we serve on the front line in our communities. Every day in our practices we come face to face with the tragedy of opioid abuse. As a pharmacist my mission is to treat all patients in my community. Over the years the number of patients receiving addiction therapy in my practice has grown at an unsettling pace. Generation after generation are caught in the grips of addiction and often we see them years after the damage has already been done. We know this problem can't be solved overnight. But there are many things we can do to treat those affected, prevent inappropriate prescribing and dispensing, and protect youth from the grips of addiction.

Prevention is where I would like to begin my remarks today. In addition to tackling the existing crisis, we really have to look at some of the underlying causes that have led us to this point. All levels of government need to work together to take a proactive approach to help prevent opioid misuse early on before it becomes a problem. This must be done through a mix of policies and public awareness of the consequences of opioid misuse and inappropriate use of pain medications. A particular focus should be on educating Canadian youth as the evidence demonstrates that many young people are exposed to illegal narcotics before they graduate from high school.

A key to success lies in building effective partnerships with health care providers. Community pharmacists play an important role in educating patients about the harms associated with prescription opioids and other potentially harmful medications. For example, medication reviews allow pharmacists to review the patient's response to the medications. This service provides an opportunity to educate patients on how to take their pain medications safely. It can also flag drug-seeking behaviour. Medication reviews can also reveal patient misconceptions about how and when to take medication, flag medications that are not adequately controlling pain, and confer with their prescribed optimized pain therapy. This valuable interaction between pharmacists and the patient is vital to ensuring safe and optimal use of medications. That fact that we see each Canadian on average 14 times per year provides us a great opportunity to intervene with our expertise and to consult with family physicians to improve patient's pain control.

CPhA supports the government's recent announcement that it will proceed with regulatory change requiring opioids to carry warning stickers and come with patient information sheets describing addiction and overdose risks. It's a good start. But pamphlets and warning labels are no substitute for pharmacists' care. That's why CPhA recommends that all jurisdictions, including the federal government as a provider of health services, expand funding for pharmacists' services to include pharmacist pain medication reviews. Funding pharmacists' consultation and follow-up would go a long way to improving the outcomes of these patients. Education goes hand in hand with better prescribing practices. The government has acknowledged more must be done to support better prescribing of opioids but Canada has fallen behind. We know that outdated Canadian prescribing guidelines simply do not reflect the best available evidence, yet our standards have not caught up. While new guidelines are expected next year, prescribers may feel pressured to prescribe opioids to patients experiencing acute or chronic pain without trying non-drug approaches. In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control encourages prescribers to start patients with low doses while providing a limited supply. We must immediately adopt comparable standards here in Canada to ensure patients receive the best possible care.

Prescribing guidelines are not the only thing that must change for our profession to be more effective and decrease the inappropriate use of opioid medications. A pharmacy is the safest, and most effective and efficient and accountable delivery model for dispensing prescription drugs. But pharmacists can only be as effective as the tools at their disposal. The existing patchwork of prescription monitoring programs, also known as PMP, across Canada is no match for the problems of polypharmacy and double doctoring. PMPs are a stopgap solution.

Moving beyond prescription monitoring to implementing a fully integrated drug information system, DIS, and functional electronic health records, EHRs, in every province and territory would ensure that pharmacists and physicians have access to the information they need to work collaboratively to monitor inappropriate prescribing and address drug-seeking behaviour.

Greater accountability will result when prescribers are unable to claim that they were unaware that a patient was being treated by another physician. The progress of deploying EHRs and a DIS across the country needs to be accelerated to give us the tools we need to reduce opioid addiction.

Public drug plans can also help limit the supply of prescription opioids by limiting the number of opioid doses that can be reimbursed within a specific time period. In my home province of New Brunswick, for over 20 years opioids and other controlled drugs have been limited to a maximum 35-day supply, yet similar controls are not in place across the country. Limiting the maximum supply provides pharmacists with more frequent opportunities for monitoring and intervention, and a much tighter turnaround time to engage the prescriber if required.

From a public safety perspective, limiting the maximum supply results in a decreased inventory of narcotics in our communities. I know from my own experience that pain and chemotherapy patients have been violently targeted by criminals for their prescription opioids. Dispensing fewer capsules at a time can help reduce the risk of diversion.

However, limiting diversion of prescription opioids from pharmacies is a drop in the bucket in fighting this public health crisis. Counterfeit pharmaceuticals manufactured illegally in clandestine labs are feeding the overdose epidemic, plain and simple. These drugs are highly dangerous, putting users at a high risk of overdose since it's impossible to know what or how much of a given substance these drugs contain. Illicit manufacturing of synthetic opioids like fentanyl is increasingly common, and law enforcement needs tools at its disposal to curb the growing supply.

The government has made good progress through the restriction of precursor chemicals, but more can be done to limit production of these dangerous drugs. The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police reports that criminals are importing commercial pill presses into Canada, but that border agents don't have the authority to seize them. To put this in perspective, these machines can be purchased online for less than $10,000, and they can make between 10,000 and 18,000 pills per hour.

As a pharmacist I can tell you that there is simply no reason for an individual to possess of one of these machines. The CPhA strongly urges the government to impose penalties for the illegal importation of pill presses and tablet machines, and to limit possession to pharmacists and others who hold an appropriate licence.

Finally, we can't forget the human face of opioid abuse, and we can't turn our backs on people who have already succumbed to opioid abuse. We need more programs to help those who are currently addicted to opioids. Pharmacists play a front-line role in assisting recovering addicts by dispensing drugs to treat addiction, such as methadone, suboxone, and naloxone, and by providing regular support, monitoring, and follow-up, sometimes on a daily basis.

These programs and the health providers who deliver them need more support. There is no magic bullet that will put an end to a crisis decades in the making, but we also want to be careful of unintended consequences. As we start to restrict legal access to these drugs, front-line health care workers can be put at risk. Pharmacists will be the first to experience intimidation, threats, and robberies.

Recently I had a discussion with a colleague from Newfoundland, where oil workers in the throes of addiction returned from Alberta to their rural community, and robbed a pharmacy with the aid of gallons of gasoline and a lighter.

Pharmacists are very concerned with the challenges that they're going to face as the supply tightens.

Lawmakers, regulators, and health care professionals must work co-operatively to find solutions to stem the tide of addiction. Pharmacists are committed to being a major part of the solution, and we ask for this committee's support in combatting opioid abuse in Canada.

9 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Thank you very much.

Speaking of front-line workers, now we have Mr. Leclerc.

9 a.m.

Réjean Leclerc Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Thank you, Mr. Chair. Good morning, everyone.

Mr. Chair, members of the committee, I would like to thank you for having me here before you today. I am aware of what a privilege it is to appear before you so that I can contribute, however little, to the work concerning the opioid crisis.

My name is Réjean Leclerc. I have been a paramedic for over 20 years and I am currently the president of the Syndicat du préhospitalier, or FSSS-CSN, the union that represents almost 1,000 paramedics who work for Urgences-santé and provide emergency medical services to the populations of Montreal and Laval. The corporation is the only government emergency medical services body in Quebec. It has an annual budget of about $130 million and reports directly to the ministère de la Santé et des Services sociaux.

During fiscal 2015-16, the paramedics we represent were sent on 315,575 assignments serving a population of about 2.4 million people living in 744 square kilometres. This makes Urgences-santé one of the largest emergency medical services providers in Canada.

While a lot of information has already been given out about the work of this committee, we note that so far, there have been no presentations about the situation in Quebec here. Although the crisis is not comparable, at present, to what some other regions of Canada are experiencing, we are seeing a marked increase in opioid overdoses in Quebec. The Institut national de santé publique du Québec has said that the mortality rate attributable to overdoses associated with drugs and narcotics has increased in the years since 2000.

That increase primarily reflects the rise in fatal overdoses after taking opioids. From 2000 to 2012, a total of 1,775 deaths attributable to an overdose after taking opioids were recorded in Quebec, representing a rate of 2.97 deaths per 100,000 people. In addition, we have the article recently published in La Presse. According to the article, in summer 2014, Montreal was at the centre of an epidemic of overdoses linked to the use of street drugs. In the space of a few weeks, 233 cases were recorded and nearly 30 people died.

It should be noted that, according to the statistics published by the Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec, between 2011 and 2015, opioid prescriptions had increased by 29%, rising from 1.9 million to 2.4 million. The Régie also said that the number of people who received prescriptions had risen by 10%, to 377,365 people in 2015.

In light of that information, some people will say there is a crisis and others will say there is not. But in any event, it is recognized that we have to continue collecting data on this subject, and even improve the work being done on that, in order to get a better picture of the situation and react better in real time.

It has also been brought to our attention that initiatives have been or are being proposed. Whether these consist of training and distributing naloxone kits to friends and family of people at risk of overdosing, wanting to set up supervised injection centres, creating watch groups to do a better job of identifying cases, or the wish expressed by the Collège des médecins du Québec to extend its members' investigative powers, the objective is the same: to significantly reduce the number of deaths attributable to opioid overdoses.

Because we are dedicated to our mission of reducing mortality and morbidity among our fellow citizens, we, as paramedics, support these initiatives, as well as Bill C-224, which was introduced by the member for Coquitlam—Port Coquitlam. We believe that the chances of survival of a person who is the victim of an overdose will be better once this bill is enacted, as long as the public is informed about it. The best thing is therefore to do it as quickly as possible.

Everyone agrees that paramedics provide the public with essential care. In Quebec, the responsibility for evaluating and maintaining the quality of that care rests with the physicians designated by the minister of health and social services. There is thus no professional order that governs paramedics in Quebec.

Because the paramedic profession is not officially recognized, which will be the case for another several years, does this mean that, if Bill C-224 provides for an exemption from possession of substances charges for persons present on the scene when health professionals arrive, the Quebec public would not be able to benefit from that exemption when only paramedics attend to a person who has overdosed? That is the question we have on this point.

Subject to interpretation by the experts, should Bill C-224 be amended to reflect this situation?

In addition, Mr. Chair, I would like to take advantage of the forum I am offered today to draw the attention of MPs and the public to a situation that we believe to be a matter of concern. Given the challenges inherent in the rising numbers of opioid overdoses, we would like to express our concern today about the way that Urgences-santé handles the training of paramedics in the naloxone protocol.

In November 2014, when the corporation was offered an opportunity to train all paramedics in the space of a few months, we made a proposal, following the usual procedure, to promote the rapid and uniform deployment of this antidote in Montreal and Laval. To our great surprise, Urgences-santé did not act on our request, claiming budget issues. The corporation preferred to adhere to the austerity vision imposed by the minister of health and social services and chose, in the middle of the opioid crisis, to train only a few dozen managers and paramedics. With only about 50 paramedics authorized to give this invaluable drug, that number being plainly insufficient, in our view, to meet rising demand, it was foreseeable that there would be unfortunate incidents, like the one that occurred and was recently described in La Presse by Dr. Marie-Ève Morin. In the case in question, an ambulance arrived urgently to find that when the paramedics arrived, they were not trained and also did not have the antidote with them that would have enabled them to rapidly reverse the effect of the drug ingested by the person suffering from an overdose.

What message are we, as an emergency service, sending the public when a large majority of paramedics are unable to do what is needed when they are called out to provide care in an emergency in the hope that they will make the difference between life and death?

Amending legislation to encourage the public to call 911 more often and faster is a fine thing, but if the luck of the draw results in the team of paramedics that are prepared to provide care not being authorized to act in overdose situations, we are failing in our objective and losing all credibility the first time out.

Is the public better served in Montreal and Laval today? According to the figures obtained by the CBC from the ministère de la Santé et des Services sociaux in September, only 35% of the thousand paramedics we represent have been trained to administer naloxone. We have to admit that this statistic is disturbing and seems to be incompatible with the efforts and policies supported by this committee and a number of other interested parties. In our view, this regrettable situation must be publicly denounced, until this training for Urgences-santé paramedics has been completed so that they are authorized to administer naloxone in order to save more lives.

Thank you for your attention.

9:10 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Thanks very much.

Okay, we'll move on to the Vancouver Fire Fighters' Union.

9:10 a.m.

Chris Coleman Representative, International Association of Fire Fighters Local 18 and Vancouver Fire Fighters' Union - Local 18

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I am a firefighter in Vancouver. I'm also chair of a political engagement committee for our union, Vancouver Fire Fighters, International Association of Fire Fighters - Local 18.

The Vancouver firefighters appreciate this opportunity to share our views with you as you study the opioid crisis in Canada. We appreciate the committee's recognition of our role in responding to the crisis and its interest in hearing directly from firefighters as we all work toward the mutual goal of mitigating the consequences of the human tragedy that is unfolding in our city.

Our union represents more than 760 full-time professional firefighters in the city of Vancouver, men and women who respond to virtually any emergency in minutes and who are the city's first line of defence.

We are an all-hazard public safety service that is 100% municipally funded. Our members respond not only to fires, where suppression and rescue of trapped citizens may be required, but also to medical emergencies, where we administer first aid until paramedics arrive, hazardous materials incidents, technical rescues, ice and water rescues, and any other kind of emergency.

As witnessed in the past, especially the past few months, Vancouver firefighters are on the front lines of the opioid crisis that is sweeping our city—especially the Downtown Eastside, which, for lack of a better expression, is ground zero for this epidemic—which largely results from abuse of fentanyl and even stronger opioids.

Only a few years ago, police and public health agencies were warning that fentanyl abuse was a growing problem in Canada. Today, they are warning that “bionic” opioids 100 times stronger than fentanyl are coursing through the streets, finding their way into the hands of everyone, from hardened addicts to teens who are just looking to party on the weekend.

Vancouver firefighters are seeing the devastating results of this first-hand. We are witnessing the tragic human toll of this crisis on a daily basis, dozens of times a day. The crisis is also taking a toll on the many agencies and workers on the front lines, including firefighters, and it's taking a toll on the resources that our department has available for the purpose of safely and effectively protecting the public from all emergencies.

To put this problem in perspective, here are some numbers. I'm sure you've heard them, but please let me repeat. According to the B.C. coroner's office, the percentage of illicit drug deaths in which fentanyl is involved rose from 5% in 2012 to 30% in 2015, to 60% so far in 2016. This is moving in the wrong direction.

In the first eight months of this year, Vancouver firefighters responded to 2,287 overdose incidents, an average of 286 per month, though that number spiked to 319 overdose incidents in July, and 341 in August. The vast majority of these overdoses were in the catchment of fire hall 2 in the Downtown Eastside, which earlier this month recorded over 1,000 emergency calls in a single month for the first time in our history, and it has remained at that extreme level ever since. In essence, our call volume has doubled since fentanyl entered the picture.

Emergency medical response is nothing new for Vancouver firefighters. We arrive quickly on the scene of medical emergencies and use existing personnel and vehicles to improve patient outcomes in a cost-effective manner. Adding the very effective opioid antidote naloxone and the appropriate training to firefighters' medical skills has made a huge difference in the current opioid crisis.

Our medical role is also a great example of a value-added service that has a major benefit at relatively little cost. Our capacity to respond to medical emergencies such as opiate overdoses adds capacity to the existing provincially funded ambulance service. Our ability to respond quickly using existing fire department personnel and vehicles puts a trained professional on scene in a timely and cost-effective manner while freeing ambulance resources for other emergencies.

But as our fire department's resources become increasingly focused on one type of emergency within a six-block area of the city, it can only be expected that there will be impacts in other areas. Responding to the opioid crisis can tie up resources, which means fire apparatus may have to come from a nearby district in order to respond to other emergencies. This, in turn, can affect response times at a time when every second counts.

Remarkably, despite booming construction and sharp population growth, there are fewer front-line firefighters in Vancouver than there were 20 years ago. Our association is working hard at the local level to advocate for increased front-line resources, which are a key element of public and firefighter safety. Our role in responding to the opioid crisis has also meant there are fewer resources available for fire prevention work in the communities we serve. There's less time for the training we normally undergo on a regular basis to ensure that we are skilled and prepared to do our jobs effectively.

Another consequence of the opioid crisis is the toll it takes on all those who are on the front lines and who see its results first-hand. Specifically, it takes a toll on an individual's mental health to see such helplessness and suffering up close on a daily basis; to work extremely hard but to feel that you are having little or no impact on a problem that is growing exponentially, like a tidal wave, on the streets of your city. There is mental strain in watching a population repeatedly harming itself and in ultimately witnessing death and deceased persons who have succumbed to this human tragedy. There's physical and mental strain in the sheer volume of responses, which ultimately affects a firefighter's ability to recuperate between shifts.

On this point I feel I must be clear. I must stress that our brothers and sisters who work in the Downtown Eastside are in trouble. They feel abandoned and they feel hopeless. In conversations with these firefighters, I hear a lot of “It's driving me nuts” and “I can't take it”. I'm told stories of their being in an alley with 20 or 30 drug users. They're unprepared and untrained for that. Part of their hopelessness comes from having to deal with the same particular overdose patient who has a needle in their neck, who's rolling around in urine and feces, more than once on the same shift. They feel abandoned and they feel hopeless.

It bears mentioning that while Vancouver may be ground zero for the fentanyl crisis, it is a national problem that's now taken root in cities across Canada. In Ontario 162 deaths were reported as fentanyl overdoses in 2015, and in Atlantic Canada at least 32 deaths, according to news reports. It is a national problem, with provincial and also federal implications, in that illicit opioids, such as the ones wreaking havoc on my Downtown Eastside, are typically shipped to Canada from destinations such as Asia, with Vancouver being an obvious port of entry.

As noted, our medical response eases the burden on the provincially funded ambulance system. In that context, the committee should note that Vancouver fire rescue's role in responding to this opioid crisis is an example of a municipal government shouldering a cost that isn't borne solely at the municipal level, and that municipal and provincial requests for funding should be viewed through that lens when appropriate. The Vancouver Fire Fighters' Union commends the work that various government and non-governmental agencies are doing in response to the opioid crisis. We support current social initiatives that are designed to reduce harm, ease suffering, and otherwise assist those who are struggling due to the opioid crisis.

I'd like to add that I offer a unique perspective, as not only am I a Vancouver fireman but I also live in the Downtown Eastside. The people who choose to come down there to work with the severely addicted mentally ill deserve our thanks, so that's what I'm doing. We, as Vancouver firefighters, are but one of the many groups of dedicated people who are doing what they can to alleviate this crisis.

Thank you again for undertaking this important study and for requesting the input of Vancouver firefighters. I welcome any questions the committee members may have.

Thank you.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Bill Casey

Thanks very much.

I find it interesting; I think you've all thanked us for inviting you to make a presentation, but on behalf of the committee, I want to say thank you for coming and for telling us your story, your experiences, in this crisis. Few of us have had any experiences at all like yours. We appreciate your input. It's not falling on deaf ears.

We'll start our seven-minute round of questions with Mr. Ayoub.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

Ramez Ayoub Liberal Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I would like to thank the witnesses for being with us today.

I am going to start by asking Mr. Leclerc a few questions.

The national situation is a matter of concern to me. After hearing your testimony and reading newspaper articles and reports, I have to admit that the situation in Quebec is of great concern to me.

How do you explain the fact that Quebec is not learning from experiments being done elsewhere in Canada? Vancouver is an example of that. How do you explain that in Quebec, the necessary training of the necessary number of people to do this is not getting done? You talked about that briefly, but I would like you to talk in a little more detail about the reasons that explain this situation. I am thinking about training for this in Montreal, particularly. When we look at Quebec as a whole, it seems to be disproportionate, in terms of the impact that this kind of training would have in Montreal. We agree that major centres are more affected by this problem initially.

9:20 a.m.

Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Réjean Leclerc

To summarize, we are currently facing budget restrictions. Urgences-santé is a government body that is directly connected with the department. When the government changed, we had a series of cuts, including cuts relating to the opioid crisis. At the same time, there was also a crisis in 2014.

You will recall the apprehension relating to the Ebola virus. A lot of resources were devoted to that dreaded crisis. At the same time, there was also the opioid crisis and a choice had to be made.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

Ramez Ayoub Liberal Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

Who made that choice?

9:20 a.m.

Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Réjean Leclerc

It was Urgences-santé, together with the department.

It is important to understand that the plan was to provide training on naloxone later. It was planned, but for later.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

Ramez Ayoub Liberal Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

What does "later" mean?

9:20 a.m.

Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Réjean Leclerc

It might be by 2019-20.

When the crisis occurred, people wanted—maybe for appearances—to train some ambulance paramedics, thinking that these people would serve the entire area. Obviously, that did not work. Even today, we are concerned because there are cuts in training. The ambulance paramedics are still not completely trained, and ordinarily, that takes only a few months. For providing this type of care, we are talking about four hours' training. We are not talking about three weeks' training per person; it is about four hours.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

Ramez Ayoub Liberal Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

I am looking at the statistics on training. I am wondering why, elsewhere in Quebec, nearly 70% of ambulance attendants have been trained. There are only three exceptions to that, three regions.

9:25 a.m.

Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Réjean Leclerc

Even in the regions where there have been no cases recorded, as many as 90% of ambulance paramedics have been trained.

There was already a delay at Urgences-santé in terms of mandatory training. Because they had to make up for that delay, they chose, in doing the planning, to do that.

However, the opioid crisis broke out and they were not able to adapt, for budget reasons. It was purely a question of budget.

9:25 a.m.

Liberal

Ramez Ayoub Liberal Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

How much time do you think it will take to make up for this delay in Montreal and Laval? Are we talking about one year or two years?

9:25 a.m.

Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Réjean Leclerc

It depends on what the authorities want to do.

If we were starting from zero today, it would take four to six months to train everybody, including the people who are absent on an irregular basis.

9:25 a.m.

Liberal

Ramez Ayoub Liberal Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

I know it is not your field of expertise, but you work with other first responders—firefighters and police.

Are you prepared to have those people trained as well?

9:25 a.m.

Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Réjean Leclerc

The important thing is that the drug be available to victims as quickly as possible.

In addition, the drug can be given without a prescription today. So that would go without saying, but on the condition that training is given. We still cannot have it being given just any way. The people have to be trained, they have to be....

9:25 a.m.

Liberal

Ramez Ayoub Liberal Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

But you would be prepared to have other workers be....

9:25 a.m.

Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Réjean Leclerc

Yes, I have no objection to that if it can save lives. You understand that time is important, to save a victim.

9:25 a.m.

Liberal

Ramez Ayoub Liberal Thérèse-De Blainville, QC

I do not like to presume, but can we say that the statistics show that people have died because this drug was not available in Montreal when help was called, or because it took too long for help to be given?

9:25 a.m.

Chair, Syndicat du préhospitalier (FSSS - CSN)

Réjean Leclerc

It is hard for me to say. There would have to be coroner's inquests to determine the full sequence of events.

Was it because the drug was not available? Was it because the ambulance was delayed? Was death pronounced once the person arrived at the hospital? I do not have that information at the moment. However, I can confirm that ambulance paramedics have attended at some places where they found a patient who had overdosed and have been unable to do anything. That is an objective fact. I cannot tell you what the consequence was, today, because I do not have precise information about that.