Times Colonist

City hit by 7 overdoses in 30 minutes

Advisories issued after OD spikes in Victoria and Campbell River

- SARAH PETRESCU spetrescu@timescolon­ist.com

Island Health issued two public advisories Friday after a spike in drug overdoses was reported in Greater Victoria and Campbell River during a 48-hour period.

“We’re still speculatin­g on some of the informatio­n, but it’s better to be cautious as there was an increase,” said Dr. Richard Stanwick, Island Health’s chief medical health officer.

He said there were six overdose cases at Royal Jubilee Hospital on Thursday. Victoria paramedics said they responded to nine overdoses.

Victoria police said they were called to seven overdoses in half an hour.

Stanwick said they are trying to determine if a fatality reported in downtown Victoria could also have been an overdose, but toxicity results take weeks. The coroner is investigat­ing, he said.

It is not clear what precipitat­ed the increase in overdose calls, whether it was a particular­ly strong or pure drug being available, or if it had to do with social assistance cheques being issued this week, he said.

Vancouver saw a similar increase, and Stanwick is worried about this Halloween weekend. According to the B.C. Coroners Service, overdose deaths occur more often on weekends.

“I worry the party crowd will be a little less prepared than the experience­d users,” he said.

“Fentanyl can be in your cocaine and crystal meth. Don’t be afraid to call 911 if something happens.”

Stanwick said until this week there has been a bit of a downward trend in overdoses and deaths, which he attributes to harm-reduction efforts such as overdose-prevention sites, naloxone and public awareness.

“I hope this is just a blip,” he said. In the first eight months of 2017, 158 people on Vancouver Island died from overdoses — about the same number of deaths as in all of 2016.

AIDS Vancouver Island was one of the first organizati­ons to post a warning online Thursday about the reports of several overdoses in a short period.

Harm-reduction manager Heather Hobbs said a client told them about police responding to several calls.

Soon after, there was an overdose at the AVI centre on Johnson Street and the paramedics responding “said that it was actually much more than that and that many of the calls were from private residences,” Hobbs said.

The person survived the overdose.

Hobbs said she posted the informatio­n online to remind the community about safer drug use.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada