Medicine Hat News

Overdose deaths dropped in August from July in B.C.

- CAMILLE BAINS

VANCOUVER

British Columbia’s chief coroner is hoping a recent decline in fatal overdoses after a record number of illicit-drug deaths is a positive sign but she says it’s time the province developed a standard of care for substance users after the fifth year of a public health emergency.

“It’s one of the things that our inquest juries and death review panels have recommende­d over and over, that there needs to be an evidence-based continuum of care for those who are reaching out,” Lisa Lapointe said.

The coroners service released data Wednesday showing 147 people fatally overdosed in August compared with 86 deaths during the same month last year. However, the monthly deaths are lower than the 176 confirmed for July and the record of 181 fatalities in June.

Data also show overdose deaths began increasing in B.C. just as the COVID-19 pandemic hit in March, when 113 people died, up from 73 in February.

Border closures have stopped the flow of drugs that typically come into the province and have been replaced by even more toxic substances, putting a greater number of people at risk of overdose, Lapointe said.

But gaps in services remain even as the province has increased the availabili­ty of the overdose-reversing medication naloxone and there are plans to soon allow certain nurses to prescribe safer drugs as an alternativ­e to potentiall­y deadly street drugs containing higher concentrat­ions of fentanyl, she said.

“In terms of the bigger picture for treatment and recovery and the wraparound services people need, it’s pretty chaotic.”

Someone who wants to detox from illicit substances can be on a wait list for two to three weeks while getting a treatment bed can take two months, Lapointe said.

“On the one hand there’s fingers pointed at those using substances and I think there’s some sentiment out there that they should be helping themselves. But on the other hand, the services just aren’t available to help them,” she said.

Even those services that are available aren’t bound by provincial standards, Lapointe added.

“If you break your leg there is a standard treatment. You’ll get an X-ray, and presumably a cast and there will be some followup. And if you need physiother­apy for rehab that will be down the line. But there is no standard right now for treatment for those experienci­ng problemati­c substance use.”

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