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Addictions

Fuelling addiction – The “safe supply” disaster

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31 minute read

By Denise Denning

There is a growing schism in the Canadian addiction treatment community regarding safer supply.

[This article was originally published by the MacDonald Laurier Institute and has been syndicated with their permission]

As the death toll from the ongoing opioid poisoning crisis in Canada continues to rise, jurisdictions across the country struggle to find solutions. Safe consumption sites, where people can use drugs in a supervised setting that provides clean syringes and overdose kits, have opened across Canada. Addiction medicine clinics that provide treatments for drug use have proliferated nation-wide. Controversially, the Trudeau government has funded so-called “safer opioid supply” programs that provide powerful pharmaceutical opioids to people who use drugs with the presumption that they will use these in place of street drugs of unknown potency containing numerous and poorly understood toxic adulterants. But even though they lack those toxic adulterants, safer supply drugs are not safe. By virtue of the pharmacology inherent to all opioids, safer supply drugs may be increasing harm.

Unlike safe consumption sites, where people bring their own drugs and use them in a supervised environment, safer supply programs provide people who use opioids with up to 30 tablets per day of the powerful synthetic opioid hydromorphone to take away with them and use elsewhere without any supervision or proof that they are using the drugs themselves. “Safer supply services provide an alternative to the toxic illegal drug supply as a way to help prevent overdoses and can connect people to other health and social services,” touts Health Canada’s safer supply web page. Safer supply programs “build on existing approaches that provide medications to treat opioid use disorder” and these programs are “more flexible and do not necessarily focus on stopping drug use.”

Health Canada’s quietly optimistic tone is echoed and magnified by advocates and activists across the country, who insist that safer supply is “the most important intervention” to save the lives of people who use drugs and cite data suggesting that safer supply is a powerful harm reduction tool for helping people avoid the risks of exposure to sketchy street drugs. And the benefits of safer supply, proponents assert, go beyond saving people from overdose. Safer supply also protects people from the stigma associated with illicit drug use. “Overdose prevention measures that go beyond individual behaviour changes, including providing a safer supply of drugs and eliminating stigma, are paramount to mitigate harms,” asserts one review. “Increasing respectful treatment of people who use substances, and reducing stigma and trauma improves the health of communities,” a review of a drug checking service declares.

“Sociopolitical factors such as prohibition, stigma, and criminalization of people who use drugs have fuelled the current overdose crisis and toxic unregulated drug supply and limited the establishment and scale up of services for people who use drugs,” proclaims another paper promoting the benefits of safer supply.

Certainly, all of us working in addiction treatment agree that putting people in jail does not solve their drug use problems, and everyone should be able to access health care without concerns of being stigmatized. But suggesting that these factors have fuelled the current crisis is an assertion that not only lacks proof but also ignores the material reality of the pharmacology of these drugs and their impact on the human central nervous system.

There is a growing schism in the Canadian addiction treatment community regarding safer supply. Its opponents, who include prominent addiction medicine physicians across Canada, insist that none of the studies of safer supply consider the number of people in safer supply programs who sell or trade their safer supply drugs to buy fentanyl. They point out that the studies finding safer supply beneficial are too narrow in their scope because they only examine the benefits to the patients receiving the safer supply and do not consider diversion and its potential for harm by putting these drugs in the hands of people other than street drug users, such as youth, or people who have stopped using drugs.

In an article published by the Globe and Mail, addiction medicine physician and writer Dr. Vincent Lam wrote about how some of his patients are struggling with their addictions because the hydromorphone has become so cheap and readily available. “Patients of mine who were free of illicit opioids for years now struggle with hydromorphone, which they are buying from those to whom it is prescribed. One told me they prefer to sleep outside rather than in shelters, because they cannot avoid hydromorphone in the shelters. One who has never tried fentanyl – which hydromorphone is meant to protect them from – is injecting high doses of hydromorphone daily, struggling to get off, while their tolerance rapidly increases.”

Another critic of safer supply, Dr. Lori Regenstreif, has seen patients severely harmed when they crush and inject the tablets. “I’ve seen people become quadriplegic and paraplegic because the infection invaded their spinal cord and damaged their nervous system,” she said. And she called the studies in favour of safer supply “customer satisfaction surveys” that do not meet scientific standards of properly conducted research. For instance, a study that has been cited as powerful evidence for the effectiveness of safer supply did not control for patients using methadone or Suboxone, two well-established and effective treatments for opioid use disorder. At baseline, the control group and the study group were using these treatments at roughly the same rates. But the authors didn’t provide the number of participants using these treatments at the study’s end. So, the purported benefits of safer supply could have been from established treatments rather than safer supply.

A word about terminology: referring to these programs as “safer supply” is problematic because it implies that these programs are safe. Dr. Lori Regenstreif suggests the term “take home tablets” as a more neutral alternative that also describes exactly how these programs work. For the rest of this article, the term “take home tablets” or “prescribed opioids” will be used, only retaining “safer supply” in the previous paragraphs for the sake of clarity.

review of 19 studies advocating for take home tablet programs found “no evidence demonstrating benefits.” For instance, only one of the studies recommended interventions that have been proven to address risk factors for addiction, even though all the studies found high rates of homelessness, unemployment, food insecurity, and other markers for poverty. And none of the studies investigated the implications of diversion, though there is increasing evidence that diversion is widespread. And a more recent review of these programs found that the “Safer Opioid Supply Policy” in British Columbia was associated with “a significant increase in opioid-related poisoning hospitalizations.”

The rhetoric is becoming increasingly heated and politicized. Supporters of take home tablet programs accuse its detractors of denying a potentially life-saving intervention to a vulnerable population of marginalized people. Critics, such as those discussed above, point to the paucity of good quality evidence and the plethora of potential harms from diversion. But what the discussion has been lacking is a consideration of how the pharmacology of these drugs should influence policies regarding the care provided to these marginalized and vulnerable people. Surely the way these drugs act in the human body should provide the underpinning for any evidence-based addiction management program.

Proponents of take home tablet programs will say, correctly, that opioids have been used for at least 3,000 years in the form of opium from Papaver somniferum, the poppy. Modern opioid pharmacology emerged out of the synthesis of morphine from opium in 1806. All opioids are derived from four compounds, including morphine, that are found in opium. Heroin is nothing more than morphine with a tweak to its molecule rendering it more fat soluble. Compared with water soluble substances, products that are fat soluble are better able to penetrate the blood brain barrier and enter the central nervous system. When heroin is injected, users experience a euphoric rush that they wouldn’t experience as intensely from injecting morphine, even though it’s almost the same drug as morphine, and within half an hour after injection, heroin is converted into morphine.

Stimulation of the opioid receptors by morphine and all its myriad opioid kin results in the classic effects of opioids such as pain relief, euphoria, sedation, respiratory depression, reduced heart rate, and a slowing of the gastrointestinal tract resulting in constipation. As the dosage is increased, respiration slows further, and patients sometimes experience nausea and vomiting. Depending on the dose taken and the person’s tolerance, increasing sedation may progress to coma and respiratory arrest. Opioids kill people by sedating them so deeply they stop breathing.

 

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With chronic use, opioids cause adaptations in the body resulting in tolerance such that these habitual users require higher doses to achieve the same degree of euphoria. The flip side of tolerance is the withdrawal that happens when the person stops using and their autonomic nervous system goes into overdrive. The greater the tolerance, the worse the withdrawal, characterized by nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, muscle cramps, bone and joint aches, tremors, anxiety, goosebumps, sweating, restlessness. Opioid withdrawal isn’t generally fatal but may be if patients develop heart arrhythmias from electrolyte loss and autonomic overstimulation.

Tolerance and withdrawal are the evil twins of addiction. Addictive drugs have a rapid onset of action, produce a euphoriant effect, and have a short duration of action. The relative addictive potential of these drugs may be predicted by how much they adhere to these intersecting characteristics. For instance, morphine is less addictive than oxycodone, the active ingredient in OxyContin. Both morphine and oxycodone are rapid acting, produce euphoria, and have a short duration of action. Both may induce tolerance and withdrawal. But morphine gets metabolized to another substance that is more potent and sustains the opioid effect, and it accumulates if the person uses it every day. Morphine in effect has a longer duration of action compared with oxycodone, which has no active metabolites. A person who takes oxycodone will experience rapidly dropping blood levels as the drug is metabolized and excreted, leaving the user in withdrawal and craving more.

The manufacturers of the oxycodone product OxyContin infamously made a case for their product being less addictive because they formulated it into a long-acting dosage form that released the drug gradually over an 8-to-12-hour period. The story of OxyContin has been exhaustively covered elsewhere, and I won’t rehash it here. In brief: people quickly discovered that OxyContin’s sustained-release matrix could be easily defeated by chewing or crushing the tablets, thus releasing the drug all at once, and as knowledge of this hack spread, a growing public health crisis ensued, resulting in the destruction of communities, massive numbers of arrests as people seeking pain relief became criminalized by their addiction, and thousands of deaths across Canada and the United States.

The hydromorphone given to fentanyl users in safer supply programs is about five times stronger than morphine and four times stronger than oxycodone. It exerts its maximal effect in one to two hours and lasts for around three to four hours. In terms of relative addictiveness by virtue of its pharmacology, hydromorphone in theory would sit between heroin and fentanyl, though in a subset of a study called NAOMI, where people who use heroin were provided hydromorphone in place of heroin without their knowledge, none of the 25 participants could tell the difference.

Then there’s fentanyl. When injected, the onset of action for morphine and oxycodone is about 10 minutes. Injected fentanyl works almost immediately, and it is fat soluble, meaning that it can penetrate the blood-brain barrier and get into the brain with ease. The duration of action for morphine and oxycodone is similar, about 4 to 6 hours. Fentanyl’s duration of action is 30 to 60 minutes, maybe stretching to 2 hours if it’s injected intramuscularly rather than intravenously.

Fentanyl has a faster onset of action compared with other opioids, it produces a powerful euphoria by virtue of being about fifty times stronger than morphine, and its effects last about half as long at most. In other words, the public health disaster that has resulted from the widespread proliferation of fentanyl in the street drug supply could have been predicted from its pharmacology. Recall how people who use heroin could not distinguish it from hydromorphone. In contrast, fentanyl users prefer fentanyl because hydromorphone is not strong enough. There is increasing evidence, albeit anecdotal, that people who use fentanyl will sell their hydromorphone to other users reluctant to try the illicit drug supply. In turn, the pharmacology of these drugs predicts that those hydromorphone users may eventually transition to using fentanyl in search of a better high as their drug use continues and their opioid tolerance deepens.

Data published by Health Canada provides corroboration for this hypothesis. In 2016, fentanyl was implicated in 52 per cent of opioid toxicity deaths in Canada, while non-fentanyl opioids were present in 59 per cent of cases. By 2018, fentanyl and its analogues were present in 80 per cent of opioid toxicity deaths while non-fentanyl opioids had fallen to 46 per cent. As of 2024, fentanyl and its analogues were present in almost all opioid toxicity deaths while the prevalence of non-fentanyl opioids had fallen to 26 per cent.

If hydromorphone isn’t strong enough for fentanyl users, why not give them pharmaceutical fentanyl instead? But there are already stronger analogues of fentanyl, such as carfentanil, that are increasingly found when samples of illicit drugs are analyzed. A recent study discovered that 20 per cent of opioid-containing samples analyzed in Alberta in 2022 contained carfentanil. If drug dealers started losing customers to take home tablet programs (they currently are not), a potential arms race, where dealers increase the potency of their drugs to make them more attractive than legally available options, may result in an illicit drug supply of ever-increasing lethality. And what of the people who use these ultra-strong opioids? Obviously, more people will die. The potency of fentanyl means that people who use it find stopping using profoundly challenging. People working in addiction treatment struggle to help patients who are experiencing the worst withdrawal any of us have ever seen. If ultra-strong opioids dwarfing fentanyl in potency become predominant in the illicit drug supply, the people who survive using these drugs may be predicted to experience a withdrawal syndrome that approaches the limits of human misery.

And therein lies the harm of these drugs. Whether or not they are criminalized; whether people can freely access them, opioids are potent drugs with many significant side effects and long-term negative effects that worsen over time. People who use legitimately acquired opioids for therapeutic reasons struggle with chronic constipation, cognitive impairment, an increased risk of falls, paradoxical increased sensitivity to pain known as “opioid-induced hyperalgia,” and an ongoing risk of experiencing withdrawal if they are unable to access their medications. All drugs should be used in the context of balancing risks versus benefits, where the harms caused by side effects are balanced against the therapeutic benefits. Like pharmacologists David Juurlink and Matthew Herder said, “Put simply, high-dose opioids constitute a self-perpetuating therapy, with patients left vulnerable by the need for ongoing treatment to avoid withdrawal, itself a pernicious, drug-related harm.”

 

Comprehensive treatment aimed at recovery is the path forward

These problems are complex and multifaceted, involving intersecting domains of public health, law enforcement, and health care. My main objection to take home tablet programs, apart from the public health disaster to which these programs contribute, is the abandonment of the principle of eventual sobriety for people who use drugs. By giving people the drugs they want, we are giving up on the possibility of a better quality of life for a marginalized population of people, many of whom are self-medicating to deal with trauma that otherwise has been left unaddressed. Addiction is a chronic and long-standing condition marked by relapses. The main risk factors for addiction are mental illness and trauma. In particular, childhood abuse puts people at a magnified risk of having a substance use disorder as an adult. Women who engage in prostitution and use illicit drugs are more likely to have been sexually abused before the age of 15. These are traumatized people who are self-medicating to deal with psychological pain.

The key is to provide comprehensive treatment that aims at full recovery, but in a gradual way that makes use of gradated treatment pathways. This means that a prescribed supply of high potency opioids may be a useful tool for some people in their complex and long-standing journey to sobriety, if used as an adjunct to other treatments and supports. To minimize the risk of diversion, prescribers may use treatment agreements, documents that patients sign where they agree to take their medication as prescribed and not divert it, and submit urine drug screens if requested. But to offer take home tablets in the absence of evidence-based addiction treatment modalities and other psychosocial supports only serves to abandon people to ongoing severe intractable high potency opioid use.

What works for people caught in a web of seemingly intractable severe addiction? The two main treatment paradigms in addiction medicine have traditionally been abstinence-based programs such as the 12-step programs popularized by Alcoholics Anonymous, and harm reduction programs such as methadone maintenance treatment. Abstinence-based programs, as the name suggests, are defined by the all-or-nothing goal of total sobriety. These programs are attractive because of their “Kids, don’t do drugs” simplicity. But this simplicity is deceptive because addiction is complex, and these programs have been found not to work for most people. For instance, abstinence-based programs will frequently kick people out of treatment for using drugs, thus punishing them for the problems that motivated them to seek treatment in the first place. The focus on abstinence means that they minimize the reality that the journey to sobriety is punctuated by relapses. Current Canadian guidelines for the treatment of opioid use disorder warn against simple cessation of drug use without follow up because of the significant risk of overdose. When people stop using opioids, their tolerance wanes. If they relapse and use their former dose, they may suffer a fatal overdose.

The harm reduction treatment paradigm emerged out of the limitations of strict abstinence-based programs that eject patients who lapse, and that don’t offer gradated treatment pathways to gradually get patients to full recovery. Harm reduction accepts drug use with the overall goal, as the name suggests, of reducing the harms associated with using illicit drugs and retaining contact with those patients unwilling or unable to stop all drug use.

Harm reduction in the form of medication assisted treatments such as methadone, Suboxone and Sublocade has been the gold standard of opioid addiction treatment, effective in not only reducing illicit opioid use but also proven to reduce overdose riskcriminal behaviourrisky sexual behaviour, and the transmission of blood-borne infections propagated by needle sharing. Medication assisted treatments are also found improve people’s lives in the domains of social determinants of health, such as going back to school, finding employment, and regaining custody of children. And these programs have been proven to save lives, reducing mortality from overdose, suicide, alcohol, and even from causes one would not intuitively associate with drug use, such as cancer and cardiovascular disease. Medication assisted treatments are a resoundingly science-based harm reduction modality and should be the treatments of first choice offered to this vulnerable population.

But harm reduction is just one of the four pillars of addiction recovery. Harm reduction by itself saves lives, but it doesn’t help people move forwards towards sobriety. The other three pillars of addiction recovery are prevention, treatment, and enforcement. Prevention addresses the risk factors for addiction and involves treatment for mental illnesses and proper, more comprehensive pain management treatment plans that go beyond just prescribing painkillers. Enforcement means preventing these drugs or their precursors from entering Canada or prosecuting those who sell illicit drugs. And treatment for people who use drugs must involve not only just harm reduction, but also a comprehensive range of services such as housing supports, counselling and other psychosocial services, and employment support.

Take home tablet programs are based on two presumptions: firstly, that people receiving these drugs will use them in place of street drugs and not just sell them to buy street drugs, as they do; and secondly, that opioids are safe to take as long as the dose is not excessive. Given that these two presumptions are false, the only conclusion we can reach is that take home tablet programs do not reduce harm, but increase it. I concede that providing people with legally sourced opioids reduces their risk of criminal prosecution, and there is a reduction in stigma when you give people what they want without judgment, but this is a false dichotomy – you can achieve reductions in prosecution with better treatment, rather than supporting objectively harmful behaviour in the name of destigmatization. At the end of the day, stigma doesn’t kill people – bad drugs do, and providing people who use drugs with the wraparound supportive services that they need and have been shown to work is more complex, and probably more expensive. But complex problems are rarely solved by simple solutions.


Denise Denning is a correctional pharmacist with background in addiction treatment. After graduating from the University of Toronto Faculty of Pharmacy, Denning completed a specialized residency in the treatment of drug and alcohol use at the Addiction Research Foundation in Toronto (now CAMH). She worked as the pharmacist at the Toronto Jail for 17 years, and the pharmacy manager at the Toronto South Detention Centre for 8 years, where she provided clinical advice on the management of patients with opioid use disorder and supervised the preparation of methadone doses. She also worked part time for four years at a pharmacy providing mostly methadone in downtown Toronto. Currently, she is the provincial pharmacy manager for the Ontario Ministry of the Solicitor General, where she provides guidance on medication related policies and procedures for that province’s correctional facilities.

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Addictions

“Unscientific and bizarre”: Yet another Toronto addiction physician criticizes Canada’s “safer supply” experiment

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By Liam Hunt

“It seems to be motivated by a very small, vocal, and well-connected group of advocates” says Dr. Michael Lester

Dr. Michael Lester, a Toronto-based addiction physician with 30 years of experience, says Canada’s “safer supply” programs are “inherently dangerous” and causing “dystopian” community harms due to widespread fraud.

These programs claim to reduce overdoses and deaths by distributing free addictive drugs—typically 8-milligram tablets of hydromorphone, an opioid as potent as heroin—to dissuade addicts from consuming riskier street substances. Yet experts across Canada say recipients regularly divert (sell or trade) their safer supply on the black market to acquire stronger illicit drugs, which then fuels addiction and organized crime.

“I have a couple dozen patients in my practice who were drug-free prior to the advent of safe supply, and they’ve gone back to using opioids in a destructive way because of the availability of diverted hydromorphone,” said Lester. “Every single day that I go to work, people tell me they’re struggling with the temptation not to take diverted safe supply. They don’t want to take it, but they take it anyway just because it’s cheap and available.”

After safer supply programs became widely accessible across Canada in 2020, Lester’s patients reported an influx of 8-milligram hydromorphone tablets on the black market, coinciding with a crash in the drug’s street price from $15–$20 per pill to just $2. He now estimates that 80 percent of his patients struggling with opioid addiction have relapsed due to diverted safer supply, leading some to abandon treatment entirely.

“Even if it’s sold at the rock-bottom price of $2 or $3 a pill, a person would make tens of thousands of dollars a year, which would have a tremendous impact on their ability to buy other drugs,” he explained. “Selling hydromorphone is too tempting not to do it, which keeps them entrenched in the whole world of dealing with opioid users and having opioids in their premises.”

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Lester said safer supply is evidently “fueling organized crime” because drug seizures in Ontario now commonly include hydromorphone, “which wasn’t happening before.” He added that some individuals who try these diverted drugs later transition to stronger opioids, such as fentanyl.

In July, for example, the London Police Service announced that seizures of hydromorphone had increased by more than 3,000 percent in the city since 2020. According to London Police Chief Thai Truong, “Diverted safer supply is being resold into our community. There’s organized drug trafficking at the highest levels of organized crime, and there’s drug trafficking at the street level. We’re seeing all of it.”

While Lester acknowledges that safer supply can be useful as a “treatment of last resort, after traditional treatments have been tried and failed,” he said it is now being offered immediately to a wide variety of patients, which has “decimated” uptake of traditional addiction therapies, such as methadone and Suboxone.

As a result, conventional addiction clinics are now at risk of shutting down, meaning some communities could lose access to gold-standard treatments (i.e., methadone and Suboxone) while highly profitable, but unscientific, safer supply programs take over instead.

Lester said the evidence supporting safer supply is biased and “misleading” because, generally speaking, these studies simply interview enrolled patients and ask them to self-report whether they benefit from the programs. He noted that many safer supply researchers are public health academics, not doctors, meaning they lack clinical experience with the communities they study.

“It seems to be motivated by a very small, vocal, and well-connected group of advocates that has completely changed the landscape in addiction medicine treatment in a very short time,” he said.

Lester argues that some safer supply researchers seem to purposefully design their study methodologies to favor the programs and disregard systemic harms. He said this flawed science is then propagated by credulous journalists who fail to adequately scrutinize agenda-driven research.

While he personally knows “a couple dozen” colleagues in addiction medicine who regularly express skepticism about safer supply, many have been reluctant to speak out, fearing backlash from activist groups that “terrorize” critics.

“The stories are common of people being harassed and insulted on social media. We’ve heard of doctors being threatened [and] dropped from committees because they spoke out.”

For example, after Lester and his colleagues published two open letters criticizing safer supply in late 2023, they were targeted by a series of articles by Drug Data Decoded, a popular Canadian harm reduction Substack, which compared the doctors to Nazis and eugenicists. The articles were then widely shared on social media by safer supply activists.

Lester recalled an incident in which harm reduction activists targeted a doctor’s daughter at her high school in retaliation for her parent’s public criticism of safer supply.

“It’s just something that seems so unscientific and so bizarre in medicine,” he said. “Physicians just aren’t used to a powerful political lobby changing a treatment protocol.”

After Lester and more than a dozen of his colleagues wrote several public letters calling for reform and requested a meeting with Ya’ara Saks, the federal Minister of Mental Health and Addictions, they found themselves “sidelined and ignored.”

After months of delays, they were able to present their clinical observations to Saks, only to have her disregard them and incorrectly claim, weeks later, that criticism of safer supply is rooted in “fear and stigma.”

“The insults aren’t a big enough consequence to keep me from speaking my mind,” he declared.

After a short reflection, he then added, “If anyone doesn’t have a stigma against this population, it’s me. I’ve dedicated my life to helping them.”


Liam Hunt is a Canadian writer and journalist with an interest in humanism, international affairs, and crime and justice. This story is produced by the Centre For Responsible Drug Policy’s “Experts Speak Up” series in partnership with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.

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Does America’s ‘drug czar’ hold lessons for Canada?

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Harry Anslinger (center) discussing cannabis control with Canadian narcotics chief Charles Henry Ludovic Sharman and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Stephen B. Gibbons in 1938. (Photo credit: United States Library of Congress’ Prints and Photographs division)

By Alexandra Keeler

The US has had a drug czar for decades. Experts share how this position has shaped US drug policy—and what it could mean for Canada

Last week, Canada announced it would appoint a “fentanyl czar” to crack down on organized crime and border security.

The move is part of a suite of security measures designed to address US President Donald Trump’s concerns about fentanyl trafficking and forestall the imposition of 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian goods.

David Hammond, a health sciences professor and research chair at the University of Waterloo, says, “There is no question that Canada would benefit from greater leadership and co-ordination in substance use policy.”

But whether Canada’s fentanyl czar “meets these needs will depend entirely on the scope of their mandate,” he told Canadian Affairs in an email.

Canadian authorities have so far provided few details about the fentanyl czar’s powers and mandate.

A Feb. 4 government news release says the czar will focus on intelligence sharing and collaborating with US counterparts. Canada’s Public Safety Minister, David McGuinty, said in a Feb. 4 CNN interview that the position “will transcend any one part of the government … [It] will pull together a full Canadian national response — between our provinces, our police of local jurisdiction, and work with our American authorities.”

Canada’s approach to the position may take cues from the US, which has long had its own drug czar. Canadian Affairs spoke to several US historians of drug policy to better understand the nature and focus of this role in the US.

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The first drug czar

The term “czar” refers to high-level officials who oversee specific policy areas and have broad authority across agencies.

Today, the US drug czar’s official title is director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy. The director is appointed by the president and responsible for advising the president and coordinating a national drug strategy.

Taleed El-Sabawi, a legal scholar and public health policy expert at Wayne State University in Detroit, Mich., said the Office of National Drug Control Policy has two branches: a law enforcement branch focused on drug supply, and a public health branch focused on demand for drugs.

“Traditionally, the supply side has been the focus and the demand side has taken a side seat,” El-Sabawi said.

David Herzberg, a historian at University at Buffalo in Buffalo, N.Y., made a similar observation.

“US drug policy has historically been dominated by moral crusading — eliminating immoral use of drugs, and policing [or] punishing the immoral people (poor, minority, and foreign/traffickers) responsible for it,” Herzberg told Canadian Affairs in an email.

Harry Anslinger, who was appointed in 1930 as the first commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, is considered the earliest iteration of the US drug czar. The bureau later merged into the Drug Enforcement Administration, the lead federal agency responsible for enforcing US drug laws.

Anslinger prioritized enforcement, and his impact was complex.

“He was part of a movement to characterize addicts as depraved and inferior individuals and he supported punitive responses not just to drug dealing but also to drug use,” said Caroline Acker, professor emerita of history at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pa.

But Anslinger also cracked down on the pharmaceutical industry. He restricted opioid production, effectively making it a low-profit, tightly controlled industry, and countered pharmaceutical public relations campaigns with his own.

“The Federal Bureau of Narcotics [at the time could] in fact be seen as the most robust national consumer protection agency, with powers to regulate and constrain major corporations that the [Food and Drug Administration] could only dream of,” said Herzberg.

The punitive approach to drugs put in place by Anslinger was the dominant model until the Nixon administration. In 1971, President Richard Nixon created an office dedicated to drug abuse prevention and appointed Jerome Jaffe as drug czar.

Jaffe established a network of methadone treatment facilities across the US. Nixon initially combined public health and law enforcement to combat rising heroin use among Vietnam War soldiers, calling addiction the nation’s top health issue.

However, Nixon later reverted back to an enforcement approach when he used drug policy to target Black communities and anti-war activists.

“We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or Black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and Blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities,” Nixon’s top domestic policy aide, John Ehrlichman, said in a 1994 interview.

Michael Botticelli, Acting Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy March 7, 2014 – Jan. 20, 2017 under President Barack Obama. [Photo Credit: Executive Office of the President of the United States]

Back and forth

More recently, in 2009, President Barack Obama appointed Michael Botticelli as drug czar. Botticelli was the first person in active recovery to hold the role.

The Obama administration recognized addiction as a chronic brain disease, a view already accepted in scientific circles but newly integrated into national drug policy. It reduced drug possession sentences and emphasized prevention and treatment.

Trump, who succeeded Obama in 2016, prioritized law enforcement while rolling back harm reduction. In 2018, his administration called for the death penalty for drug traffickers, and in 2019, sued to block a supervised consumption site in Philadelphia, Pa.

Trump appointed James Carroll as drug czar in 2017. But in 2018 Trump proposed slashing the office’s budget by more than 90 per cent and transferring authority for key drug programs to other agencies. Lawmakers blocked the plan, however, and the Office of National Drug Control Policy remained intact.

In 2022, President Joe Biden appointed Dr. Rahul Gupta, the first medical doctor to serve as drug czar. Herzberg says Gupta also prioritized treatment, by, for example, expanding access to naloxone and addiction medications. But he also cracked down on drug trafficking.

In December 2024, Gupta outlined America’s international efforts to combat fentanyl trafficking, naming China, Mexico, Colombia and India as key players — but not Canada.

Gupta’s last day was Jan. 19. Trump has yet to appoint someone to the role.

Canada’s fentanyl czar

El-Sabawi says she views Canada’s appointment of a drug czar as a signal that the government will be focused on supply side, law enforcement initiatives.

Hammond, the University of Waterloo professor, says he hopes efforts to address Canada’s drug problems focus on both the supply and demand sides of the equation.

“Supply-side measures are an important component of substance use policy, but limited in their effectiveness when they are not accompanied by demand-side policies,” he said.

The Canada Border Services Agency and Health Canada redirected Canadian Affairs’ inquiries about the new fentanyl czar role to Public Safety Canada. Public Safety Canada did not respond to multiple requests for comment before publication.

El-Sabawi suggests the entire drug czar role needs rethinking.

“I think the role needs to be re-envisioned as one that is more of a coordinator [across] the administrative branch on addiction and overdose issues … as opposed to what it is now, which is really a mouthpiece — symbolic,” she said.

“Most drug czars don’t get much done.”


This article was produced through the Breaking Needles Fellowship Program, which provided a grant to Canadian Affairs, a digital media outlet, to fund journalism exploring addiction and crime in Canada. Articles produced through the Fellowship are co-published by Break The Needle and Canadian Affairs.

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