We typically assume that the issue with resources and capacity to respond to the toxic drug supply is remoteness, that it's geographical. We are not asking for or expecting hospitals to be built in every one of our communities, but the Canada Health Act says there should be universal access to health, and its objective is accessible health care without barriers to our wellness.
I mention this because there are lots of Canadians who live in rural and remote communities, but we are talking specifically about first nations people. They have a right to access health care close to home, where they need it. When it's not available there, they will find it someplace else, which often draws them to urban environments.
In urban environments, they don't always have access to the appropriate health care they need when they have opioid dependency or addictions to methamphetamine or other stimulants or even to sedatives like benzodiazepines, which I mentioned, or the “tranq” drug xylazine, which is not a controlled substance. All of them have substantial effects on people when they don't have any health care resources close to home.
That isn't just because of geography. That has to do with decision-making. If the Canada Health Act says there should be universal access to health care for every resident in Canada no matter where people live, then where are the policies that ensure access to physician care, prescribers, nurse practitioners, pharmacies, public health resources and harm reduction resources when they exist for the rest of the population? Why are those not made available to Canadians and first nations populations no matter where they live?
Often this is referred to as a jurisdictional issue. Who's responsible? The Canada Health Act is clear: Our rights as defined in treaties, the Constitution and now the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples do not erase our rights under the Canada Health Act. This is a decision, a policy decision, not just a matter of geography.