Times Colonist

Fatal overdoses on Island worry health officials

- SARAH PETRESCU and LINDSAY KINES

Vancouver Island has the secondhigh­est number of fentanylre­lated illicit-drug overdose deaths among health regions in the province, according to a coroner’s report.

Victoria is in the top three municipali­ties for overdose deaths since 2007, alongside Vancouver and Surrey.

Nanaimo is in the top three municipali­ties for fentanylde­tected overdose deaths, also alongside Vancouver and Surrey. Fentanyl is a highly toxic synthetic opiate used in prescripti­on drugs that is being cut into illicit drugs such as heroin and cocaine.

“There has been a surge of overdose deaths here, more than our fair share,” said Dr. Paul Hasselback, Island Health’s chief medical officer for central Vancouver Island.

According to the report, 433 people in B.C. have died from drug overdoses from January to July of this year.

That averages about two deaths per day and is a 74 per cent increase from 2015. Twothirds of the deaths were fentanyl-related.

In seven months this year, 34 people in Victoria have died from illicit-drug overdoses.

There were 17 deaths in all of 2015.

“We’ve been so concerned, we put in an emergency-response plan in January,” said Hasselback.

He said it is not just deaths Island Health and other agencies are concerned about. Overdose visits to hospital have also nearly doubled.

“Mostly driven by Nanaimo Regional and Royal Jubilee [hospitals],” Hasselback said, noting: “Most fatalities occur outside of the hospital.”

Hasselback said the cause of the overdose increases is hard to pinpoint, but is “likely related to the innovation and distributi­on of the illicit-drug network.”

He said Island Health is part of prevention groups collecting data and increasing access to naloxone — a life-saving antidote to the fatal effects of heroin and fentanyl — for first responders, agencies and users.

“The kits are predominan­tly dispersed to the user community. They are often the first responders,” he said, adding that engaging users and improving access to safer consumptio­n sites and addiction medication would likely have the greatest impact.

Mark Wilson, a co-ordinator at the Society of Living Illicit Drug Users, said the overdose statistics are further proof that Victoria needs a supervised safe-injection site.

“The sad part is we’ve been saying it all along,” Wilson said. “The awareness is already there, but people will use.”

Wilson said there is progress with the availabili­ty of naloxone. Everyone on his team of 15 volunteers has used a kit to help save a life.

Outreach workers, including current and former drug users, are on the streets daily.

“They’re trained to use the kits, but not as nurses. It’s putting them on the front lines in a stressful situation,” Wilson said. “Focusing on the drugs or where they come from won’t make the difference. We need to focus on the safety of users.”

Provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall, who declared the rise in overdoses a publicheal­th emergency in April, said overall the fatality numbers appear to be “plateauing” instead of decreasing.

“It’s disappoint­ing, but I don’t think these things get turned around overnight,” he said. “So if we’re seeing this stabilizin­g rather than an ongoing increase, that is perhaps a reason for optimism.

“We hope and would very much like to see the numbers start to come down in future months.”

Kendall said he’s hoping to see the fatality statistics begin to trend downward before the end of the year.

Kendall, who co-chairs a task force dealing with the issue, said getting more informatio­n to the public about the risks will make a difference.

For instance, some deaths involved people using drugs alone, so that nobody else was available to call 911 or administer naloxone.

“If we could get people — if they have to use — to use more cautiously, always have somebody present. That would help, because then we can reverse an overdose.”

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