Controversial safer supply clinic closing its doors next week
A divisive Ottawa safer supply clinic that prescribed opioids to fentanyl users but drew criticism while operating in two locations in less than a year will close its doors next week.
Northwood Recovery prescribed Dilaudid and other medication to people struggling with drug addiction. It opened first in Hintonburg last September before moving to a new location in Chinatown in March.
While patients who spoke to CBC generally supported the clinic, the company was criticized by others for its reliance on virtual care, for not offering a supervised injection site or wraparound services such as supportive housing, and for what neighbours said was an upsurge in open drug use.
On May 30, Dr. Suman Koka, the doctor running Northwood Recovery and a network of sister clinics across Ontario, emailed Somerset Coun. Ariel Troster to confirm Northwood is closing its clinical practice in Ottawa on June 9. Troster shared the email with CBC.
"We have informed the pharmacies," Koka wrote in the email. "We are taking direction from the patients as to which physician they wish their care to be transferred."
Koka did not respond by deadline to a request for comment.
Troster told CBC that while she supports harm reduction and more resources are definitely needed, she had concerns about how Northwood Recovery was operating out of its clinic on Somerset Street W., including its lack of supportive housing.
The concern with Northwood Recovery was that people were getting prescriptions for Dilaudid when they were addicted to fentanyl because that's the strongest drug that doctors can prescribe according to the formulary in Ontario, Troster said.
"Because it takes six or eight doses a day in order to stave off addiction to fentanyl, it means it was inevitable that people had to carry large quantities of drugs with them, which led to diversion or people reselling the drugs and a lot of the chaos that goes along with that," Troster continued.
"People were being robbed of their drugs and it was a really unsustainable solution."
Northwood Recovery's departure will likely bring relief to the community, "but it's definitely not a solution," Troster added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
20 minutes ago
- CBC
Dead woman's police statement not admissible in trial of alleged serial rapist
The evidence of a Calgary woman who told police she'd been kidnapped, drugged and sexually assaulted by an alleged serial rapist can not be considered at his trial because she died in tragic circumstances and can't be cross-examined. Richard Mantha is on trial, facing 20 charges related to allegations he sexually assaulted seven women, most of whom were vulnerable sex-trade workers at the time. One of those women, whom CBC News is calling LM in order to comply with a publication ban, died in a tragic accident in December. CBC News is not publishing details of her death because they would identify the woman, whose identity remains protected by a publication ban. On Friday, Justice Judith Shriar ruled the alleged victim's statement to police is not admissible because of concerns over its reliability. LM told police she'd spoken with other women on the street about the case. Because of her death, defence lawyer Justin Dean wouldn't get the chance to question her about the unsworn statement. Last month, prosecutor Dominique Mathurin played a video-taped statement LM gave to police, who were investigating Mantha at the time. In the video, LM told Staff Sgt. Shelby Stewart that, in April 2022, she was dumped on the side of the road after escaping an RV inside a quonset hut east of the city. 'The second girl' She was picked up by an RCMP officer who told LM that she was "the second girl that happened to" in the last week. The officer did not take the woman to a detachment for a statement. Instead, he dropped her off at a CTrain station in Calgary. About a year later, Mantha was being investigated by Calgary police and, in the course of that investigation, Stewart learned of LM's interaction with the RCMP. LM told Stewart that a man, whom the Crown alleges was Mantha, picked her up and offered her a ride to a CTrain station. It was raining and LM said yes. The man gave LM a Sprite, which she told police caused her to black out. LM fought off attacker LM told the officer that she woke up in an RV naked, except for her bra. She said she fought the man off and threatened to stab him. LM said she found her knife and demanded he drive her back to where he'd picked her up. As they left the RV, LM said she realized the vehicle was inside a quonset. Court has already heard evidence that Mantha was living in an RV inside a quonset on a property east of the city near Langdon. Once on the road, LM said the man shoved her out of the truck and left her on the side of the road. When asked to point out the location of the quonset on a map, LM identified Mantha's rental property as the place she'd been taken. The case is back for trial continuation in July.

CBC
20 minutes ago
- CBC
Crown stays cold case murder charges after identifying 'insurmountable' issue with evidence
A Calgary man accused of killing two people nearly 30 years ago saw his murder charges dropped on Friday due to what the Crown described as "a significant issue with the evidence." Stuart Douglass MacGregor, 55, was facing two counts of first-degree murder for the killings of Barry Christian Buchart, 26, and Trevor Thomas Deakins, 25, who were fatally shot in 1994. Defence lawyers Rebecca Snukal and Michael Bates have been in pre-trial hearings dealing with the admissibility of certain evidence leading up to the trial which was set to take place in November. On Friday, Snukal confirmed she'd received a letter from the Crown announcing the charges had been stayed. "Our client has always maintained his innocence in relation to these charges and is extremely relieved and grateful to return home to his family," wrote Snukal and Bates in a brief statement. Snukal confirmed Stuart will be released from custody later today after being held at the Calgary Remand Centre since his arrest in 2023. Evidence issue 'insurmountable' A spokesperson for the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service also issued a statement, saying that prosecutors continually assess their cases to "ensure all aspects of the evidence are carefully considered at every stage of a prosecution." "During the prosecution, the Crown prosecutor encountered a significant issue with the evidence," reads the statement. "The Crown prosecutor thoroughly explored all paths to trial so the allegations could be determined on the merits, however, the evidentiary issue was ultimately determined to be insurmountable." On July 11, 1994, two men broke into a home in Calgary's southeast, where Buchart and Deakins were killed. Both victims were shot point-blank. The investigation into the killings went cold for decades before police reopened the investigation in 2019. Using genetic genealogical investigative techniques, police were able to track down family members of the suspects, which ultimately led them to arrest two men. Leonard Brian Cochrane was charged in 2020. MacGregor was arrested and charged in 2023, the same year a Calgary judge convicted Cochrane of murder. Cochrane is currently serving a life sentence.


CTV News
24 minutes ago
- CTV News
Vaccine research, innovation group launches at UW School of Pharmacy
Researchers at the University of Waterloo are looking for ways to get vaccines to underserved areas. CTV's Spencer Turcotte has more on that initiative. Improving access to vaccines across Canada is the goal of a new research effort based out of the University of Waterloo. The School of Pharmacy launched a new research collaborative on Friday, thanks to a $300,000 investment from the biopharma company GSK Canada. 'There are many groups that are underserved in terms of vaccines,' professor Nancy Waite explained. The funding will help address that very problem. 'We know there is a huge barrier to immunization, often with individuals in underserved communities or individuals who are older,' said Michelle Horn, the country medical director at GSK. The Pharmacy Innovation and Immunization Research Collaborative (PIIRC) will not only focus on vaccine access, but delivery and education too. It is something pharmacy students say comes at a vital time. 'It's important now, with certain outbreaks of infectious disease, to support these programs,' said student Aaron Lau. 'The best time to plant a tree was 30 years ago. The best time for a vaccine is now.' 'In recent years, the scope of practice for pharmacists has expanded to allow us to administer more vaccines,' said Jonathan Fang, another UW pharmacy student. The new collaborative wants to leverage that. 'We know there are pharmacies in the majority of communities, 90 to 95 per cent of individuals in Canada live within five kilometres of a pharmacy,' said Waite. Delivery, however, is only half the battle. The researchers will tackle vaccine misinformation and vaccine hesitancy, while also looking for easier ways people can track what shots they already received. While infectious diseases continue to pose a threat, the hope is their work will help the entire country be better prepared for future outbreaks.