Pharmacy tackles opioid addictions, mental illness and health issues among city's homeless
Colleen Underwood | CBC News | Posted: August 31, 2017 9:17 PM | Last Updated: August 31, 2017
Rich Rego attributes his team's rapport with street addicts for their recovery
Richard Rego says he's seen the grips of opioid addiction first hand.
Last Halloween, one of his regular methadone customers ran in asking for help after someone overdosed on fentanyl outside of the pharmacy.
Rego says that when he arrived, the man's face was turning purple. He injected naloxone and saved the man's life.
But to Rego's surprise, the man was not thankful.
"He woke up and called me a bad name and said I'd just ruined his high," said Rego, director of Beacon Pharmacy.
Rego says the man died the next day of a fatal overdose
Rego and his team fill prescriptions for methadone and other drugs meant to help people get off of opioids or other highly addictive substances, as part of their regular duties.
He says he's been the de facto pharmacist for clients at the Mustard Seed for 10 years at his current location in the Sheldon M. Chumir Health Centre.
So he says it made sense to open up another pharmacy closer to the Mustard Seed, to meet the need head on, when space became available in the agency's new wellness centre.
"People might be inclined to say, this is right downstairs from me, like this is right where I live, or I hang out, so we might be able to reach people by being on site," said Rego.
The wellness centre's clinical director, Boris Lesar, admits his clients are at risk of harm right now because of the ongoing opioid crisis.
"When you have a big building like this and you have so many residents and when you have so many people congregating around here, there's a potential that could be a problem," said Lesar. "We want to do something to prevent that happening in this part of town, at least."
Lesar hopes having an in-house pharmacy will also reduce the potential trade in legal drugs.
" A lot of our clients get jumped on the streets and they get robbed and medication gets taken away from them. So if they don't have to walk that 10 blocks, that five blocks, to the pharmacy, that reduces the risks of those drugs being on the streets again," said Lesar.
Outreach worker and recovering heroin addict Chelsea Burnham says that when she started taking methadone, there were only two methadone clinics available in the city, and there were only certain pharmacies that would dispense it.
"So I would either have to be go all day without my methadone and try to get there before it closed, or be late for work," said Burnham
She says making treatments more accessible may help reduce the amount of illegal street drugs that addicts will use.
"Cause when you are sick (from withdrawl), you will do anything to not to be sick," said Burnham.
Rego hopes that by being closer to those at risk of succumbing to an opioid overdose, he'll be able to reach out to them before it happens, with his friendly but no-nonsense approach.
"We really challenge these folks to get better... The straight talk really works, and sometimes the tough talk works even better, " said Rego.
The pharmacy is expected to open in September.
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