Skip to main content

User account menu

  • Log in

Languages

  • English

Main navigation

  • About ISSUP

    • ISSUP Rationale
    • Membership
      • Membership Criteria
      • Code of Ethics
      • Who is ISSUP for?
    • News
    • International Partners
    • Governance
    • ISSUP Scientific Council
    • Friends of ISSUP (USA)
    • ISSUP Workshops
      • Bali 2025
      • Thessaloniki 2024
      • Buenos Aires 2023
      • Manila 2022
      • Abu Dhabi 2022
      • International Conference 2021 (Virtual)
      • Africa 2020 (Virtual)
      • Vienna 2019
      • Nairobi 2018
      • Cancún 2017
      • Campinas 2016
      • Bangkok 2015
    • ISSUP Awards
      • Evidence-Based Award
      • Local Initiative Award
      • Services Award
      • Excellence in Training Provision
      • Outstanding Contribution to ISSUP Award
    • In Memoriam
    • Acknowledgements
    • ISSUP Website Guides
    • Contact ISSUP
    • FAQs - Frequently Asked Questions
  • Professional Development

    • Online Learning Hub
      • How to Register
      • UTC Self Led Courses
    • Universal Curricula (UC)
      • Universal Prevention Curriculum
      • Universal Treatment Curriculum
      • Universal Recovery Curriculum
      • Access UPC & UTC
      • Training Providers
      • Becoming a Training Provider
    • Resources
      • Glossary
      • ISSUP Webinars
      • ICAP certification
      • INEP Plus
      • Prevention Insights Video Series
      • Prevention Lists
      • HealthEKnowledge
      • WiRED International
      • Quality in Treatment
      • SPR-ISSUP Prevention Workbook
    • Job Board
  • Knowledge Share

    • Search in the Knowledge Share
    • ADDICTOLOGY Journal
      • Latest Issue
  • National Chapters

    • Africa
      • ISSUP Botswana
      • ISSUP Côte d’Ivoire
      • ISSUP Egypt
      • ISSUP The Gambia
      • ISSUP Kenya
      • ISSUP Namibia
      • ISSUP Nigeria
      • ISSUP South Africa
      • ISSUP Tanzania
      • ISSUP Togo
      • ISSUP Uganda
    • The Americas
      • ISSUP Argentina
      • ISSUP The Bahamas
      • ISSUP Brazil
      • ISSUP Canada
      • ISSUP Chile
      • ISSUP Colombia
      • ISSUP Ecuador
      • ISSUP El Salvador
      • ISSUP Guatemala
      • ISSUP Mexico
      • ISSUP Panama
      • ISSUP Paraguay
      • ISSUP Peru
      • ISSUP United States
    • Asia
      • ISSUP Afghanistan
      • ISSUP India
      • ISSUP Indonesia
      • ISSUP Kazakhstan
      • ISSUP Lebanon
      • ISSUP Malaysia
      • ISSUP in Pakistan
      • ISSUP Philippines
      • ISSUP Qatar
      • ISSUP Sri Lanka
      • ISSUP Thailand
      • ISSUP Türkiye
      • ISSUP United Arab Emirates
      • ISSUP Uzbekistan
      • ISSUP Vietnam
    • Europe
      • ISSUP Czech Republic
      • ISSUP Greece
      • ISSUP Italy
      • ISSUP Spain
      • ISSUP Ukraine
      • ISSUP United Kingdom
    • How to Become a National Chapter
    • ISSUP National Chapters' Advisory Committee
  • Events

    • Search through all events
  • Networks

    • A–Z
  • My ISSUP

    • Member Directory
    • Apply for membership

Epi

data, info
Back to Epi main page
Jose Luis Vazquez Martinez

CCENDU Bulletin: Changes in Stimulant Use and Related Harms: Focus on Methamphetamine and Cocaine

Jose Luis Vazquez Martinez - 25 April 2019

Full text: https://forum.issup.net/t/ccendu-bulletin-changes-in-stimulant-use-and-related-harms-focus-on-methamphetamine-and-cocaine/4120

 

Summary
In response to recent reports of increasing harms related to methamphetamine use in Canada, this bulletin summarizes recent changes in stimulant-related harms in Canadian communities. It is intended for a broad audience of health professionals, law enforcement, harm reduction and health service providers, policy makers, and people who use drugs.

 

The stimulants causing the greatest harms in Canada are methamphetamine and cocaine powder and crack cocaine.

  • Methamphetamine availability and harms associated with use are increasing, especially in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.

  • Cocaine and crack cocaine are still widely used by people who use drugs. However, in some areas of the country, availability, use and harms associated with cocaine appear to be decreasing, and in some cases are being replaced by availability, use and harms associated methamphetamine.

 

Stimulants can contain adulterants, such as opioids or other toxic substances, so harm reduction efforts need to include strategies used in response to the opioid crisis.

 

CCSA and CCENDU made several recommendations about how to address the increased use of stimulants (specifically methamphetamine) to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health for its study on the impacts of methamphetamine in Canada (Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction, 2018b). These include the following recommendations:

  • Continue prioritizing and investing in the collection and dissemination of better quality and timely data on drug use and related harms in Canada through the continued development of the Canadian Drugs and Substances Observatory and support for CCENDU;

  • Continue supporting research on drug use and related harms in Canada;

  • Invest upstream to reduce inequities in the social determinants of health and increase resiliency and self-efficacy in youth;

  • Reduce stigma by promoting the understanding of substance use as a health issue;

  • Increase the availability and accessibility of an evidence-informed, client-centred continuum of services and supports;

  • Support interventions to reduce harms specific to methamphetamine use, such as outreach education, needle distribution, safer smoking supplies, pipes that reduce burns and cuts, and other methods to reduce the spread of communicable diseases; and

  • Invest in low-threshold housing

Click here to read the full text
0 comments
Contact Us

Stay Connected

Newsletter

ISSUP is funded by the U.S. Department of State via the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL). INL works to keep Americans safe by countering crime, illegal drugs, and instability abroad.

Copyright © International Society of Substance Use Prevention and Treatment Professionals Privacy Policy