Addictions
Alberta’s recovery-focused addiction agency to address data gap

By Alexandra Keeler
The launch of Alberta’s Centre of Recovery Excellence comes as Ontario and Saskatchewan also shift to recovery-oriented models
This fall, Alberta will be launching a new agency to lead recovery-focused addiction research and treatment in the province.
The Canadian Centre of Recovery Excellence (CoRE) aims to address a major challenge in Canada’s toxic drug crisis: a shortage of evidence-based, recovery-oriented research.
“[W]e hope to … support individuals on their recovery journey using the best available evidence on what works and what does not work,” the centre’s communications lead Katy Merrifield told Canadian Affairs in a written statement.
“There is also a lack of tangible research centred on the outcomes of recovery-focused policy, which is what CoRE aims to address,” she said.
The move comes at a time when Ontario and Saskatchewan are also shifting their policy responses away from harm-reduction strategies — such as safe consumption sites and needle exchange programs — toward more recovery-oriented models.
Last week, Ontario announced it would be closing 10 safe consumption sites located near daycares and schools and opening 19 recovery hubs. It also plans to prevent municipalities from establishing new consumption sites, requesting the decriminalization of illegal drugs or participating in federal safe supply initiatives, Canadian Affairs reported last week.
Early signs of success
CoRE’s launch is part of Alberta’s broader approach to addiction under the United Conservative Party government. The party, which has been in power since 2019, favours a recovery-oriented approach over a harm-reduction model.
In 2019, Alberta committed $140 million over four years to enhance addiction services, which has increased the number of available treatment spaces from 19,000 to 29,400. The province has eliminated a $40-a-day user fee at publicly funded addiction treatment facilities. And it has authorized police officers to assist detainees in seeking treatment.
The number of opioid-related deaths in the first three months of 2024 was 452, down from a high of 627 deaths in Q1 2023. However, it is still above the 241 deaths registered in the first quarter of 2020, according to the Alberta Substance Use Surveillance System.
Despite these early signs of success, the province would like to see further data to support its recovery-focused policy decisions.
“There is no clear centre of recovery excellence that can advise on what works and does not work when it comes to mental health and addictions,” Alberta’s Minister of Mental Health and Addiction Dan Williams said April 2 when announcing the creation of CoRE.
“One challenge with addiction research, and research in general, is there is often an attempt to look at a very specific intervention over a short period of time,” said Merrified. “[B]roader, long-term research is time consuming and expensive.”
CoRE will investigate the number of Albertans affected by addiction, their recovery journeys and outcomes, such as return to work, access to housing and family reunification.
The agency also plans to integrate global best practices into Alberta’s programs.
“From Portugal’s commission for drug dissuasion combined with their massive scale of recovery spaces to Italy’s use of recovery communities, we look forward to incorporating global lessons where applicable,” said Merrifield.
Subscribe for free to get BTN’s latest news and analysis – or donate to our investigative journalism fund.
Industry funding
Alberta’s 2024 budget committed $5 million in funding to launch CoRE.
Merrifield says CoRE’s funding structure will be a key point of distinction between it and the British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, which is another key player in addiction research and education.
In contrast to CoRE, the B.C. centre prioritizes addiction medicine and harm reduction.
“Our vision is to enable the well-being of people who use substances through evidence-informed, stigma-free policies,” the centre’s website says.
“CoRE has safeguards enshrined in legislation to protect against receiving external funding that could be seen as attempting to bias research results,” said Merrifield, noting the centre will not accept industry funding from pharmaceutical or cannabis companies.
By contrast, the British Columbia Centre on Substance Use does receive funding from the pharmaceutical company Indivior, the pharmacy chain Shoppers Drug Mart and the cannabis companies Tilray and Canopy Growth.
Indivior is the maker of Suboxone, a medication prescribed for opioid dependence. Indivior is currently the subject of at least two class-action lawsuits alleging Indivior failed to disclose Suboxone’s adverse side effects, Canadian Affairs reported in August.
In 2021, Shoppers Drug Mart offered a $2-million gift to the University of British Columbia to establish a pharmacy fellowship and support the education of pharmacist-focused addiction treatment at the British Columbia Centre on Substance Use.
Asked about the risk that drug industry funding could compromise the objectivity of their research, the B.C. centre referred Canadian Affairs to their website’s funding page. The website states their research is supported by peer-reviewed grants and independent ethical reviews to ensure objectivity.
Similar programs
Kevin Hollett, communications lead for the British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, said the centre is willing to collaborate with CoRE.
“We would welcome opportunities to collaborate and share knowledge with the CoRE team following their operational launch and as they define their research scope,” he said in a written statement.
CoRE was initially slated to be operational this summer, but launch details have not yet been announced.
At a conference on April 4, Minister Williams announced plans for CoRE to collaborate with Ontario and Saskatchewan on recovery-focused treatment systems. Currently, both provinces lack a direct equivalent to CoRE or B.C.’s centre.
“Many jurisdictions are interested in learning from the Alberta Recovery Model and implementing similar programs,” said Merrifield.
This article was produced through the Breaking Needles Fellowship Program, which provided a grant to Canadian Affairs, a digital media outlet, to fund journalism on addiction and crime in Canada. Articles produced through the Fellowship are co-published by Break The Needle and Canadian Affairs.
Break The Needle. Our content is always free – but if you want to help us commission more high-quality journalism, consider getting a voluntary paid subscription.
Addictions
Why North America’s Drug Decriminalization Experiments Failed

A 2022 Los Angeles Times piece advocates following Vancouver’s model of drug liberalization and treatment. Adam Zivo argues British Columbia’s model has been proven a failure.
By Adam Zivo
Oregon and British Columbia neglected to coerce addicts into treatment.
Ever since Portugal enacted drug decriminalization in 2001, reformers have argued that North America should follow suit. The Portuguese saw precipitous declines in overdoses and blood-borne infections, they argued, so why not adopt their approach?
But when Oregon and British Columbia decriminalized drugs in the early 2020s, the results were so catastrophic that both jurisdictions quickly reversed course. Why? The reason is simple: American and Canadian policymakers failed to grasp what led to the Portuguese model’s initial success.
Contrary to popular belief, Portugal does not allow consequence-free drug use. While the country treats the possession of illicit drugs for personal use as an administrative offense, it nonetheless summons apprehended drug users to “dissuasion” commissions composed of doctors, social workers, and lawyers. These commissions assess a drug user’s health, consumption habits, and socioeconomic circumstances before using arbitrator-like powers to impose appropriate sanctions.
These sanctions depend on the nature of the offense. In less severe cases, users receive warnings, small fines, or compulsory drug education. Severe or repeat offenders, however, can be banned from visiting certain places or people, or even have their property confiscated. Offenders who fail to comply are subject to wage garnishment.
The Bureau is a reader-supported publication.
To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Throughout the process, users are strongly encouraged to seek voluntary drug treatment, with most penalties waived if they accept. In the first few years after decriminalization, Portugal made significant investments into its national addiction and mental-health infrastructure (e.g., methadone clinics) to ensure that it had sufficient capacity to absorb these patients.
This form of decriminalization is far less radical than its North American proponents assume. In effect, Portugal created an alternative justice system that coercively diverts addicts into rehab instead of jail. That users are not criminally charged does not mean they are not held accountable. Further, the country still criminalizes the public consumption and trafficking of illicit drugs.
At first, Portugal’s decriminalization experiment was a clear success. During the 2000s, drug-related HIV infections halved, non-criminal drug seizures surged 500 percent, and the number of addicts in treatment rose by two-thirds. While the data are conflicting on whether overall drug use increased or decreased, it is widely accepted that decriminalization did not, at first, lead to a tidal wave of new addiction cases.
Then things changed. The 2008 global financial crisis destabilized the Portuguese economy and prompted austerity measures that slashed public drug-treatment capacity. Wait times for state-funded rehab ballooned, sometimes reaching a year. Police stopped citing addicts for possession, or even public consumption, believing that the country’s dissuasion commissions had grown dysfunctional. Worse, to cut costs, the government outsourced many of its addiction services to ideological nonprofits that prioritized “harm reduction” services (e.g., distributing clean crack pipes, operating “safe consumption” sites) over nudging users into rehab. These factors gradually transformed the Portuguese system from one focused on recovery to one that enables and normalizes addiction.
This shift accelerated after the Covid-19 pandemic. As crime and public disorder rose, more discarded drug paraphernalia littered the streets. The national overdose rate reached a 12-year high in 2023, and that year, the police chief of the country’s second-largest city told the Washington Post that, anecdotally, the drug problem seemed comparable to what it was before decriminalization. Amid the chaos, some community leaders demanded reform, sparking a debate that continues today.
In North America, however, progressive policymakers seem entirely unaware of these developments and the role that treatment and coercion played in Portugal’s initial success.
In late 2020, Oregon embarked on its own drug decriminalization experiment, known as Measure 110. Though proponents cited Portugal’s success, unlike the European nation, Oregon failed to establish any substantive coercive mechanisms to divert addicts into treatment. The state merely gave drug users a choice between paying a $100 ticket or calling a health hotline. Because the state imposed no penalty for failing to follow through with either option, drug possession effectively became a consequence-free behavior. Police data from 2022, for example, found that 81 percent of ticketed individuals simply ignored their fines.
Additionally, the state failed to invest in treatment capacity and actually defunded existing drug-use-prevention programs to finance Measure 110’s unused support systems, such as the health hotline.
The results were disastrous. Overdose deaths spiked almost 50 percent between 2021 and 2023. Crime and public drug use became so rampant in Portland that state leaders declared a 90-day fentanyl emergency in early 2024. Facing withering public backlash, Oregon ended its decriminalization experiment in the spring of 2024 after almost four years of failure.
The same story played out in British Columbia, which launched a three-year decriminalization pilot project in January 2023. British Columbia, like Oregon, declined to establish dissuasion commissions. Instead, because Canadian policymakers assumed that “destigmatizing” treatment would lead more addicts to pursue it, their new system employed no coercive tools. Drug users caught with fewer than 2.5 grams of illicit substances were simply given a card with local health and social service contacts.
This approach, too, proved calamitous. Open drug use and public disorder exploded throughout the province. Parents complained about the proliferation of discarded syringes on their children’s playgrounds. The public was further scandalized by the discovery that addicts were permitted to smoke fentanyl and meth openly in hospitals, including in shared patient rooms. A 2025 study published in JAMA Health Forum, which compared British Columbia with several other Canadian provinces, found that the decriminalization pilot was associated with a spike in opioid hospitalizations.
The province’s progressive government mostly recriminalized drugs in early 2024, cutting the pilot short by two years. Their motivations were seemingly political, with polling data showing burgeoning support for their conservative rivals.
The lessons here are straightforward. Portugal’s decriminalization worked initially because it did not remove consequences for drug users. It imposed a robust system of non-criminal sanctions to control addicts’ behavior and coerce them into well-funded, highly accessible treatment facilities.
Done right, decriminalization should result in the normalization of rehabilitation—not of drug use. Portugal discovered this 20 years ago and then slowly lost the plot. North American policymakers, on the other hand, never understood the story to begin with.
The Bureau is a reader-supported publication.
To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Invite your friends and earn rewards
Addictions
‘Greening out’: Experts call for THC limits in cannabis products

Experts warn surging THC levels are fuelling growing health risks — and say stronger regulation is urgently needed
More and more cannabis users are ending up in emergency rooms suffering from severe, repeated bouts of vomiting — a condition known as cannabis hyperemesis syndrome.
A new study found that emergency visits for cannabis hyperemesis syndrome increased 13-fold over eight years, accounting for more than 8,000 of the nearly 13,000 cannabis-related ER visits in that period.
Experts say the mounting health risks associated with cannabis use are due to rising THC levels in cannabis products. They urge stronger regulation, better labeling and more research — using Quebec’s approach as a potential model.
“I don’t think we have the perfect model in Quebec — there’s pros and cons,” said Dr. Didier Jutras-Aswad, a clinical scientist at the Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CHUM) and a professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Addiction at Université de Montréal.
“But overall, the process of … progressively implementing changes, not wanting to be the first one in line to put all this new product on the market, I think is probably, in terms of public health, more prudent.”
THC levels
Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is the primary psychoactive compound in cannabis and what causes the “high.” It is one of more than 100 cannabinoids, or chemical compounds, naturally found in the cannabis plant.
Delta‑9‑THC is the most common and well-studied form, though other forms of THC exist and are less understood.
Federal drug laws place strict limits on delta-9-THC levels. They cap delta-9-THC at 10 milligrams per piece for edibles, and 1,000 milligrams per container for extracts and topicals. Dried cannabis flower and pre-rolled joints have no THC cap, but must disclose the THC level on their labels.
Other intoxicating cannabinoids — like delta-8-THC — are not regulated the same way. Some producers use these other cannabinoids to get around delta-9 limits to make their products more potent.
In 2023, Health Canada issued guidance warning against this practice, noting it could lead to inspections and regulatory action. Its guidance is not legally binding.
“Good weed”
Dr. Oyedeji Ayonrinde, a professor of psychiatry and psychology at Queen’s University, says “good weed” used to mean a product did not contain pesticides or contaminants. Now, it often means a product is high-THC — reinforcing the risky idea that stronger is better.
“We would say, Oh, man, that guy’s got good weed,’ because it’s 30 per cent [THC],” he said.
Today, THC levels average about 25 per cent — up from about four per cent in the 1960s. But some products go as high as 80 or 90 per cent THC.
“That’s ‘the good stuff,’” said Ayonrinde, referring to how consumers view products with these elevated levels of THC.
“One of the major [health] risk factors is the use of cannabis with higher than 10 per cent THC,” said Dr. Daniel Myran, a physician and Canada Research Chair at the University of Ottawa.
Myran led three Canadian studies this year linking heavy cannabis use to health risks such as schizophrenia, dementia and early death.
Chris Blair, a Canadian originally from Jamaica, says the cannabis he once smoked — natural, Jamaican, homegrown weed known as “sess” — was much milder than what is available through Ontario dispensaries today.
“We grew it, it was natural … the regular Mary Jane sess,” he said. “And then times changed … the sess was pushed to almost become the hydro[ponic] type of thing.”
Hydroponic growing methods produce more potent cannabis with higher THC levels. Blair says he could no longer go back to Jamaican sess, because he had built up a tolerance to it.
“Unfortunately, going back to sess was not the same, because it wasn’t the same high or same strength,” he said.
“Back when [I was] smoking [Jamaican sess] … I’d finished that spliff and we were ready to go hang out, we’re ready to party.
“Nowadays, after you smoke you’re mashed and you’re not doing anything.”
Greening out
Ayonrinde says higher THC levels can alter how the brain’s dopamine receptors work, which may induce paranoia.
“Being out of touch with reality, auditory hallucinogens, delusional thoughts, disorganized thinking — that’s part of the mechanism pathway for the development of a severe and enduring mental illness [like] schizophrenia,” he said.
High THC can also worsen anxiety, disrupt sleep, affect mood and trigger psychosis, he says. Other experts cited risks including cannabis use disorder, mental health issues, and dizziness or nausea — sometimes referred to as “greening out.”
Young people, whose brains are still developing until age 25, are most vulnerable to these harmful effects, Ayonrinde says.
During adolescence, the brain undergoes intense growth. “Think of the brain like a construction site,” he said. Frequent, high-dose THC use during this critical period can disrupt dopamine systems and increase the risk of building scaffolding for serious mental health conditions.
While some literature suggests that cannabidiol (CBD) — another major cannabinoid in most cannabis products — may act as a calming, non-psychoactive counterbalance to THC, Ayonrinde says this is only true at extremely high doses, around 6,000 mg.
Standard measurement
Experts say the diversity of cannabis products on the market is part of the challenge.
“When people say, ‘Weed helps me with my trauma,’ an example I often give is: cannabis is just like saying ‘dog’,” said Ayonrinde.
“What breed? Is it a chihuahua or a rottweiler or a great dane? Because without knowing exactly the THC, CBD … what are you talking about?
“There’s no single cannabis.”
Cannabis products lack clear dosage guidelines, and Ayonrinde says marketing messages push consumers to opt for high potency options.
Ruth Ross, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at the University of Toronto, would like Canada to adopt a standard unit of measurement for THC levels, so consumers could easily understand what one unit means.
“Say a unit was one milligram; they could multiply that up — it’s easy math,” she said.
Myran agrees. “The way we sell alcohol in this country is not set up so that you pay the same amount for a litre of wine as you do for a litre of vodka,” said Myran.
“You have a minimum price per unit of ethanol … and there’s a really compelling reason to price cannabis according to its THC content … [to] financially discourage people from always moving to the highest potency THC products.”
Ross says there is also a need for more current cannabis research. Most cannabis research evaluates the effects of cannabis products with much lower THC levels than those seen on the market today. Long-term health effects can take decades to appear — similar to tobacco.
“Some of [the health harms] might emerge over many, many years, and we don’t know what those will be until data comes in,” she said.
Quebec’s approach
Ross points to Quebec as a unique model in cannabis regulation. It is the only province that caps THC potency and tightly controls how cannabis can be marketed. For example, edibles resembling candy or desserts are prohibited.
Jutras-Aswad, of the Université de Montréal, says overly strict rules can drive some consumers — especially those younger than the province’s legal age of 21 — to the black market.
Still, he says Quebec’s model offers benefits, including greater control over sales and a public health approach focused on harm reduction rather than profit.
Under Quebec’s Cannabis Regulation Act, the Société québécoise du cannabis (SQDC) is the only authorized cannabis retailer in the province.
SQDC employees are trained to offer science-based information, connect consumers with support services and promote safer use.
Researchers in Ontario are now studying how Quebec’s stricter THC limits may be affecting cannabis-related harms compared to other provinces.
“That’s going to be a really interesting within-Canada experiment,” said Ross.
Myran recommends adopting Quebec’s 30 per cent THC caps nationwide.
He also recommends better product labelling requirements and a pricing model that sets a minimum price per unit of THC — to discourage the purchase of high-potency products.
In a 2023 op-ed, Ross argued provinces should fund cannabis research to guide policy and public health.
In it, she notes that Quebec reinvested all $95 million of its 2022 revenue from cannabis sales into prevention and research. By contrast, Ontario set aside just 0.1% of its $170 million in cannabis revenue for a Social Impact Fund that has no clear public health focus.
“Canada can do so much better. We have world experts in cannabis research from coast-to-coast, and we are uniquely positioned to have high-quality, well-funded research on its medical use and potential harms,” she wrote.
“Five years from now, will we be dealing with major public health challenges that could have been avoided?”
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.
The Bureau is a reader-supported publication.
To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Invite your friends and earn rewards
-
Censorship Industrial Complex1 day ago
Freedom of speech under threat on university campuses in Canada
-
Alberta20 hours ago
Ottawa’s destructive federal energy policies and Premier Danielle Smith’s three part solution
-
Business1 day ago
Carney engaging in Orwellian doublethink with federal budget rhetoric
-
Alberta1 day ago
Is Alberta getting ripped off by Ottawa? The numbers say yes
-
Energy1 day ago
Canada’s LNG breakthrough must be just the beginning
-
Business1 day ago
Court’s ‘Aboriginal title’ ruling further damages B.C.’s investment climate
-
Business1 day ago
Manitoba Must Act Now To Develop Its Northern Ports
-
Agriculture19 hours ago
In the USA, Food Trumps Green Energy, Wind And Solar