Indigenous advocates call for more culturally informed addictions treatment in B.C. - Action News
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Indigenous

Indigenous advocates call for more culturally informed addictions treatment in B.C.

Indigenous people in B.C. are disproportionately impacted by the illicit drug crisis compared to the general population. To combat the health emergency advocates are calling for more culturally relevant treatment.

First Nations people die from illicit drug toxicity at 5 times the rate of B.C.'s general population

The words 'wake up, we are dying' are painted in protest on the Prince George courthouse in April 2019. Statistics from the B.C. Chief Coroner show suspected illicit drug toxicity claimed the lives of at least 2,272 people in the province last year. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

As of last week Avis O'Brien (N'alaga) marked 16 yearsin recovery from addiction.

"I was on the Downtown Eastside [of Vancouver] as an Indigenous youth," said O'Brien, who is Haida and Kwakwaka'wakw.

"I was homeless;I was surviving my heroin addiction through sex trade work."

What she creditsfor saving her life is reconnecting with herculture.

"I didn't know physiologically or somatically what was happening when I was engaging in those practicesbut they felt really goodand it was providing me with the kind of relief that I needed to stay on my path," she said.

Herbusiness, N'alaga Consulting in Courtenay, B.C. on Vancouver Island, creates addictions programming for treatment centres rooted in Indigenous knowledge and healing.

Her programs filla gapshe felt wasmissing when she was starting recovery.

Avis O'Brien smiles at the camera.
Avis O'Brien is a consultant who creates addictions programming for treatment centres rooted in Indigenous knowledge and healing. (Nycky-Jay Vanjecek, bluetree photography)

"There was no access to elders, there was no cultural teachings, no land-based healing. It just did not exist," O'Brien said.

Statistics from the B.C. Coroners Servicereleased on Jan. 31 show confirmed or suspected illicit drug toxicity claimed the lives of at least2,272 people in the province last year.

The report saidin November and Decemberabout 6.4 people a day died from illicit drug toxicity.

B.C.'s First Nations Health Authority reportsFirst Nations people were dying from illicit drug toxicity at five times the rate of B.C.'s general population. For First Nations womenspecifically, compared with non-Indigenouswomen in the province in the first half of 2022, the rate was 8.8 times higher.

O'Brien's programs are based on the work of people like Michael Yellow Bird and Riel Dupuis-Rossi, whostudied the science behind the impacts of colonization on Indigenous peopleand how cultural connection can heal.

O'Brien's dream for Canada?As many addiction treatment centres as there are churches.

"We need land-based, culturally rooted, trauma-informed from Indigenous social justice lens treatment centres," she said.

Dream of a new treatment centre

Cory Cliffe, from the Wei Wai Kum First Nation inCampbell River, B.C.,has a vision to createan addictions treatment centre serving 20 to 40 people offering culturally influenced care, something thatplayed a big part of his journeyrecovering from addiction.

"Culture is medicine," said Cliffe.

"I can't stress that enough."

Two years ago he co-founded 7 Generations Stewards Society, a First Nations non-profitofferingservices including cultural workshops, employment and skills training, mental health and wellnessand addictions programming.

Cory Cliffe smiles at the camera wearing a ball cap.
Cory Cliffe is one of the founders of a First Nations non-profit 7 Generations Stewards Society based in Campbell River, B.C. (Submitted by Cory Cliffe )

Cliffe saida treatment centre servingNorth Vancouver Island would help centralizeservices7 Generations offers.

"The idea is to create something where everybody feels at home and like their culture has had an influence on it," said Cliffe.

The First Nations Health Authority website lists10 treatment centresin B.C. for those seekingaddiction services.

Tsow-Tun Le Lum Society in Snaw-Naw-As First Nationon Vancouver Island offers substance misuse and trauma programming.

"It's always been hugely important that the foundation of what we do is based in culture," said Nola Jeffrey,executive director of Tsow-Tun Le Lum, who isTsimshian and Coast Salish from Lax Kw'alaams.

Jeffrey said their waitlist varies between three and six months for one of the 20 beds available even after creating a second substance misuse program eight years ago, when wait times stretched over one year.

A new centre is being built further south in Duncan, B.C., with space for 32 people and includes more space for residents in the dining room, an area for group work, an exercise and yoga studio andarts and crafts rooms.

The build, though, was impacted by inflation; what wasa $12.5 million project before COVID-19 now costs $19 million. Tsow-Tun Le Lum has $16.5 million for the projectand Jeffrey said the remainder will come through grants and donations.

Thecentre is funded by theFirst Nations Health Authority, Correctional Services Canada whichpays for clients from federal institutions and grants from banks and private donations.

Jeffrey said thecentre is funded to serve 32 people, even though the demand is much higher. But keeping the centre small isimportant, he said,for Tsow-Tun Le Lum to feel welcoming and not like an institution.

"People really can't do their healing work unless they feel safe," Jeffrey said.

"What we do is we bring them in and we surround them with that safety and that love."

Long waits posechallenges

Dr. Nel Wieman is theacting chief medical officer at the First Nations Health Authority andis Anishinaabe fromLittle Grand Rapids First Nation inManitoba. Wiemansaida major gap in these programs is capacity.

Dr. Nel Wieman is acting Chief Medical Officer at the First Nations Health Authority in B.C. (Submitted by Nel Wieman )

People are sometimes told to waitweeks or months when seeking treatment too long,Wieman said, and due to a toxic drug supply, many die waiting for help.

"In some ways that's on us as a society, right?" Wieman said.

"We haven't made that space for people to seek and access service when they need it and when they want it."

But, Wieman said, there is no onesolution for every community's needs.

More treatment beds, outpatient treatment and a more widely availablesafe supply programs arethings Wieman points to, but for certain, Wieman said, culturally informed care is wanted.

"We hear all the time from B.C. First Nations people and communities, that they very much want to see culture and traditional healing as part of the services that are provided to them," said Wieman.