Saturday, December 28, 2024

‘It’s an optimistic space:’ Inside Toronto’s new drug withdrawal centre

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TORONTO — Joshua Orson sits on the edge of a bed in a bright, clean room, thinking about his journey from addict to health-care worker.

The room is part of a new, 36-bed detox space in downtown Toronto that largely helps homeless patients, although it’s open to anyone who needs to get clean. There are private and shared rooms, a kitchen with cooked meals, laundry rooms and several lounges to play cards or watch television.

The space offers group and individual therapy, with addictions counsellors and nurses on the clock 24 hours a day.

Withdrawal Management Services, operated by Unity Health Toronto, is free and funded by the Ministry of Health. It is one of four publicly funded residential detox facilities in Toronto that helps people get off drugs and alcohol.

It is a vastly different space from its previous iteration where Orson got clean – a dorm-style room inside a homeless shelter without private beds. It sat in an ancient building with an old heating system and poor ventilation.

“When you come to the door here, you’re given a sense of dignity and hope after losing so much of yourself to get there and I think that’s really important,” said Orson, who is now a peer support worker at the site.

“The space here suggests what you can become rather than where you’re at, which I felt the former space was more like where you’re at. It’s an optimistic space.”

The withdrawal centre had its official opening a few weeks ago, but it began operating in the summer. Its 36 beds were filled very quickly and it remains full, said Dr. Irfan Dhalla, a physician at St. Michael’s Hospital and the vice-president of clinical programs at Unity.

But spots open up frequently as the program is designed for short-term residential stays, he said, and day programs are also available.

Unity also operates two other withdrawal centres in the city with 51 beds. They are also full.

The demand is further proof of a severe shortage of detox beds across the province, Dhalla said.

Illicit fentanyl emerged in Ontario about a decade ago as the opioid crisis spread slowly eastward from British Columbia. Opioid overdose deaths spiked soon after.

Last year, nearly 2,600 Ontarians died from drug toxicity, the vast majority due to fentanyl alone, or fentanyl in combination with other drugs like benzodiazepines. That is a 50 per cent increase in deaths from 2019.

The prolonged crisis prompted the provincial government to fundamentally shift its approach to an abstinence-based model. It is set to close 10 supervised consumption sites, including five in Toronto, saying the spots are too close to daycares and schools.

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