Community Opioid Load: Concept to Action in Kingston-KFLA Dr Kieran Moore CCFP (EM ) FCFP FRCPC MPH MSc (DM ) Professor of Emergency and Family Medicine Associate Medical Officer of Health, KFLA, Program Director of Public Health and PrevenFve Medicine Queen s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Faculty/Presenter Disclosure u Faculty: Kieran Moore u Rela2onships with commercial interests: u Grants/Research Support: None u Speakers Bureau/Honoraria: None u Consul2ng Fees: Ministry of the Environment u Other: Employee of KFLA Public Health,
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of Objec2ves Understand the epidemiology of the opioid epidemic in Ontario Describe the role of physicians in this outbreak-cause of the Opioid load Describe an approach to policy changes that are required at a local, provincial and national level...long road ahead
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of Define the problem update on data Coroner Mortality Data
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Annual Standardized Opioid-Related Mortality rates by County 2006-2010 Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Prescrip2on Drug Abuse in Ontario Prescription opioids are the predominant form of illicit opioid use Main sources of opioids are doctor s prescriptions(37%), the street(21%), or a combination(26%), non-prescription purchases(5%), and family and friends Sproule, B., Changing PaEerns in Opioid Addiction, Canadian Family Physician, vol. 55, January 2009, 68-69.
800 Total number of opioid toxicity deaths and opioid + alcohol toxicity deaths in Ontario, 2002-2014 700 Total number of deaths 600 500 400 300 200 100 Opioid + alcohol toxicity deaths Opioid toxicity deaths 0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Year Figure 1: The total number of opioid toxicity deaths and opioid + alcohol toxicity deaths annually in Ontario from 2002 to 2014.
Chain of Survival-OPIATES: Persistent and Consistent Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Defla2ng the Addic2on Balloon-SLOWLY To AVOID Unintended Nega2ve Consequences Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of Four Pillars Approach: KFLA Ac2on Plan Prevention: SMART GOALS Treatment Harm Reduction Enforcement-Intelligence
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of BC College of Physician Guidelines The public health crisis of prescription drug misuse has developed in part due to the prescribing of physicians. The profession has a collective ethical responsibility to mitigate its contribution to the problem of prescription drug misuse, particularly the over-prescribing of opioids, sedatives and stimulants.
BC College of Physicians 3. Document discussion with patients that nonpharmacologic therapy and non-opioid analgesics are preferred for chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) and that potential benefit of LTOT is modest and risk significant. 4. Advise patients that LTOT is not indicated for certain medical conditions including headache disorders, fibromyalgia and axial low back pain. 5. Always prescribe the lowest effective dosage of opioid medication, document careful reassessment if increasing the dose to >50 morphine milligram equivalents (MME) per day and avoid increasing the dose to >90 MME per day Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Naloxone:h[p:// www.treatmentdirectories.com/naloxonenarcan-training-to-save-life-from-heroinoverdose/ Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Opiate Outbreak Management: CDC Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of We have created prescribing guidelines based on the work done in New York, Washington and Oregon We have partnered with the ED and Primary Care Physician Leadership to have these guidelines implemented across the health system-chain of survival We are adopting new Opiate prescribing guidelinesperhaps mandatory education We have increased referrals for harm reduction and addiction treatment
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of Objec2ves Understand the epidemiology of the opioid epidemic in Ontario, Canada Describe the role of physicians in this outbreak Describe policy changes that are required at a local, provincial and national level to reduce the community opiate load
References Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police. Substance Abuse CommiEee. Patch4Patch Initiative: fentanyl abuse a shared responsibility. Toronto, Canada: Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police; 2014, 13 p. Harding J. Opioid Overdose Prevention in Frontenac County: The potential impact of an naloxone distribution program based on opioid prescribing rates, tertiary care usage and opioid-related mortality data. Poster session presented at: Queen s University Centre for Studies in Primary Care annual Research Day; 2015 June; Kingston, ON. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Avoiding Abuse, Achieving Balance: Tackling the Opioid Public Health Crisis. Toronto, Canada: The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; 2010 Sept. 46 p. Kapur B. Frequently Asked Questions: Opiate Dependency and Methadone Maintenance Treatment program follow-up. Toronto: Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto; 2014 Nov, 8 p. Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. Narcotics Monitoring System Overview. [PowerPoint presentation]. Toronto, Canada: Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care; 2013 Nov. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Narcotics Safety and Awareness Act. Toronto, Ontario: The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; 211 Oct, 1 p. Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. The way forward: Stewardship for prescription narcotics in Ontario. Toronto, Canada: Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care; 2012 Oct. 43 p. Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of
Thanks...slides, content, energy Dr ScoE Duggan Dr Paul Dungey Dr Jane Buxton Dr John Harding Dr Greg Murphy Dr Rupa Patel Dr Meredith MacKenzie Dr Ruth Dubin Chief Coroner of Ontario KFLA Public Health Many others. Canadian Guideline for Safe and EffecFve Use of