Alarming Increase in Opioid-Related Deaths among Ontario’s Youth Highlights Urgent Need for Action
A recent report reveals a troubling trend in Ontario, as opioid-related deaths among teenagers and young adults tripled from 2014 to 2021, while drug treatment rates significantly declined. The research, led by the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network at Unity Health Toronto, found a surge in opioid deaths among individuals aged 15 to 24 during the first year of the pandemic, with 169 deaths recorded compared to 115 the previous year. Shockingly, the report shows that only 37.1 percent of young people who died from drug-related causes received any treatment for opioid use disorder within the last year, in stark contrast to the 48.6 percent treatment rate observed among adults aged 25 to 44.
The comprehensive analysis, conducted by the Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario, Public Health Ontario, the Ontario Forensic Pathology Service, and non-profit research institute ICES, examined provincial health-care and demographic data from 2014 to 2021 for the 15-to 24-year-old age group. The findings paint a grim picture, with 752 young lives lost, 711 hospitalizations, and 5,401 emergency department visits during that period.
Startlingly, the use of medications for treating opioid use disorder plummeted by 50 percent over the seven-year period, and in-person residential treatment fell by a staggering 73 percent. Dr. Tara Gomes, a scientist at Unity Health Toronto and leader of the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network, highlights the concerning disparity between the harms experienced by this demographic and their access to treatment, questioning whether the healthcare services provided are truly meeting their needs.
Of significant concern is the increased presence of fentanyl, detected in 94 percent of those who died from opioids during the pandemic, marking a 10 percent rise after COVID-19 emerged in the province. Additionally, the researchers discovered that only approximately half of the young people who died from opioids had an opioid use disorder, a departure from the overall provincial trend where about two-thirds of opioid-related deaths occur in individuals with this disorder. This discrepancy suggests that young people face greater barriers to accessing treatment, possibly due to physicians being hesitant to provide treatment options such as methadone or buprenorphine. Dr. Gomes also notes that patients may be reluctant to initiate a methadone regime that entails daily trips to the pharmacy and can last for years.
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