Ontario commits $222M to three-year opioid relief effort

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NBHC Sustainability
August 29, 2017

The Government of Ontario says the $222 million it earmarked over the next three years as part of its opioid addiction and overdose prevention strategy will mean more front-line harm-reduction workers will be in place across the province. Other initiatives that will be funded include:

  • Expanding the supply of naloxone and exploring more opportunities to make nasal spray naloxone available;
  • Expanding Rapid Access Addiction Medicine Clinics across the province and boosting access to community-based withdrawal management services and addictions programs; and
  • Expanding proven harm-reduction services, such as needle exchange programs and supervised injection sites.

The provincial government will also collaborate with the Ontario College of Family Physicians on physician training about appropriate prescription of opioids for pain management and how to treat patients with addiction.
Autres nouvelles:
L'Ontario soutient les personnes touchées par la crise des opioïdes - Gouvernement de l'Ontario
Ont. announces funding to fight opioid overdoses and deaths - The Canadian Press
Ont. knows $222M to fight opioid crisis only the beginning - Ottawa Citizen
Ontario health minister says province to invest $222M over 3 years on opioid crisis - CBC News
CAMH Welcomes Ontario Opioid Crisis Measures - CAMH
Healthcare, harm reduction workers call on Ontario to declare opioid emergency - CTV News
Ontario urged to declare opioid emergency, as Ottawa safe-injection site sees 50 - Ottawa Citizen
Province won’t call opioid crisis an emergency, but pledges ‘significant’ help - The Star

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