Thursday, February 19, 2026

πŸ’” $18 Million on Naloxone: Could It Save More Lives in Treatment?

 πŸ’” $18 Million on Naloxone: Could It Save More Lives in Treatment?

B.C. is spending $18 million on nasal naloxone kits — life-saving devices that reverse opioid overdoses in seconds. And yes, naloxone is a miracle drug. It’s preventing deaths right now. πŸ’‰

But here’s the tough question: what if that $18 million went to addiction treatment instead?

Let’s break it down:

Use of $18M What it buys Impact
Naloxone kits ~200,000 kits Can save lives immediately during an overdose, but doesn’t treat addiction long-term
Treatment programs ~450 residential treatment spots for a year Helps people recover fully from addiction, but doesn’t prevent immediate overdoses

So, we’re facing a real-life dilemma: save lives now or invest in long-term recovery?

The truth is, we need both. Naloxone stops deaths in the moment, but treatment gives people the support they need to rebuild their lives.

πŸ’‘ Imagine if funding was balanced — more kits on the streets and more treatment spots open across B.C. That could turn a crisis into real recovery.

It’s time for a conversation about smart funding, life-saving interventions, and giving people a real chance to recover.


Reflective questions for readers:

  1. Would you prioritize saving lives immediately or investing in long-term recovery?
  2. How can government spending balance emergency measures and treatment programs?
  3. What barriers prevent more people from accessing treatment in B.C.?
  4. Should communities push for both more naloxone kits and treatment spots?
  5. How do we measure “success” in addressing the opioid crisis?


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