4.3 Article

The increase in benzodiazepine-laced drugs and related risks in Canada: The urgent need for effective and sustainable solutions

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY
Volume 111, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2022.103933

Keywords

Benzodiazepines; Canada; Drug policy; Opioids; Overdose; Public Health

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The overdose crisis in Canada has worsened and become increasingly difficult to control, with efforts to address it falling short and leading to unintended consequences. One major consequence is the increase in adulterants in the illegal drug supply, particularly synthetic benzodiazepine-laced opioids, which poses significant risks for drug users including fatal and non-fatal overdoses and increased dependence. This has complicated public health initiatives and overdose prevention efforts, highlighting the need for effective policies including education on the specific harms of opioid and benzodiazepine co-use, scaling-up harm reduction measures, and eliminating the toxic drug supply.
The overdose crisis in Canada has continuously evolved and is increasingly challenging to contain, while efforts from governments and policymakers to address it have often fallen short and resulted in unintended consequences. One of the main repercussions has been an unprecedented rise in adulterants in the illegal drug supply, including a wide array of pharmacological and psychoactive compounds and chemicals, which has resulted in a progressively toxic drug supply. Most recently, there has been a stark increase in synthetic benzodiazepine-laced opioids (i.e., 'benzodope') in some Canadian jurisdictions. This unique combination carries distinct and amplified risks for people who use drugs including fatal and non-fatal overdoses, increased dependence and withdrawal symptoms, and places them in extremely vulnerable positions. The emergence of benzodiazepines within the illicit drug supply has substantially contributed to drug-related morbidity and mortality in Canada, and has further complicated current public health initiatives and overdose prevention efforts. This reality underscores the need for effective and sustainable policy solutions to address the evolving overdose epidemic including increased knowledge and education on the specific harms of opioid and benzodiazepine co-use (especially in regards to the complexity of opioid/benzodiazepine overdoses), scaling-up harm reduction measures, and eliminating the toxic drug supply altogether.

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