Thank you for inviting me to speak to you today.
My name is Maria Hudspith. I'm the executive director of Pain BC, a collaborative charitable organization whose vision is a future where no one is alone with pain.
I'm joining you today from the traditional ancestral and unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh nations.
In addition to my role with Pain BC, I was the co-chair of the Canadian pain task force, convened by former health minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor following the 2018 opioid summit.
I was invited here to speak with you today about the role of chronic pain in the overdose crisis.
What do we know about chronic pain? Very briefly, chronic pain is defined as pain that persists beyond three months. It can be caused by other diseases, injury or surgery, and it can exist without an identified cause. It is a prevalent, costly and often invisible condition. One in five people in Canada lives with it across their lifespan. People who experience marginalization are disproportionately impacted by chronic pain, including indigenous peoples, people who are incarcerated, veterans, people who are unhoused and others. Best practice treatment includes what we call the three Ps: pharmacological treatment, psychological support and physical approaches.
What are the impacts of chronic pain? We know that in 2019 it cost Canada between $38.3 billion and $40.4 billion in direct and indirect costs. We know that people who live with pain are four times as likely to experience depression and anxiety, and twice as likely to die by suicide. We know that untreated pain is a significant driver of substance use and the overdose crisis. Estimates vary but consistently note that between 45% and 65% of people with substance use disorder report living with chronic pain. Chronic pain impacts our ability to work and earn a living, to go to school, to be a caregiver and to participate in our communities. Despite the prevalence, the impacts and the tremendous financial and human toll, Canada has been slow to address pain as a priority across the health system, and approaches to pain have not been integrated into the overdose crisis response.
What is the connection between pain and the overdose crisis? Well, we know that untreated pain is a significant driver of this problem. People who use substances, and their families, point to the lack of pain care as a contributor to substance use and also as an impediment to successful treatment and recovery. One example is a study focused on primary care patients who used illicit substances, which found that 87% experienced chronic pain and 51% reported using illicit drugs for pain relief. In B.C., coroner's data shows that nearly half of all people who died of overdose sought care for pain in the year prior to their deaths.
Starting in 2016, we began to see a pendulum swing away from prescribing opioids for chronic pain. The change was rapid, driven by new evidence, public discourse and various regulatory and policy levers. Unfortunately, these changes have had significant unintended consequences, as access to opioids for pain was reduced without offering accessible, affordable alternatives. Many Canadians who used opioids to manage pain have been weaned or cut off their medications. We know, through both research and the stories of people with lived experience, that this has driven some people towards the toxic drug supply, with devastating and sometimes deadly results. While governments have noted these unintended consequences of the revised prescribing guidelines, we have not seen a shift in practice, nor a reduction in overdoses. Some people who live with pain have called out the irony of safe supply, with de-prescribing opioids for pain on one hand and prescribing opioids for addiction on the other.
As an organization, we care about all people who live with pain, so this distinction between “legitimate” pain patients, as sometimes has been noted—meaning people who don't live with addictions—and people who live with concurrent pain and addictions.... To us, everyone who lives with pain deserves care.
The overdose crisis has continued unabated, despite tremendous investment in prevention, harm reduction and treatment. What has lacked investment is pain management as an essential component of our health system and our overdose response.
The Canadian pain task force was mandated to assess the state of chronic pain in Canada, to advise on best practices and to make specific policy recommendations in the form of a national action plan. This action plan was released by Health Canada in April 2021, and implementation is ongoing through top-down and bottom-up approaches.
The action plan—