Times Colonist

B.C. overdose deaths drop in June

- AMY SMART

VANCOUVER — The latest overdose statistics in British Columbia show a dip in the number of suspected illicit drug deaths in June compared with the same month a year earlier, but the death toll remains high.

More than 100 British Columbians are dying of overdoses each month, or more than three people every day, the B.C. Coroners Service said Thursday.

There were 105 illicit drug overdose deaths in June, a drop from 123 in the same month last year. About 80 per cent of the fatalities are male and 71 per cent are between the ages of 30 and 59.

“That’s unacceptab­ly high. It’s absolutely a public health crisis and it needs to be met with appropriat­e policy responses,” said Dr. Ryan McNeil, a research scientist with the B.C. Centre on Substance Use and assistant professor at the University of British Columbia’s department of medicine.

The overdose crisis in B.C. has led to a number of new programs aimed at reducing deaths.

McNeil is part of a team of experts at both the centre and the university recommendi­ng a new approach to dealing with overdoses in Vancouver’s single-roomoccupa­ncy buildings amid positive results from a project where tenants and landlords were given overdose response training.

While the statistics show 60 per cent of the fatal overdoses happened in private homes, it’s unknown what proportion occurred in single-room buildings.

The buildings were identified as high-risk places for overdoses by the City of Vancouver and Vancouver Coastal Health, said McNeil, who was the senior author of a report on the tenant-training project.

The buildings are home to some of the city’s most marginaliz­ed and isolated residents and can be difficult places to access for public-health workers, he said.

McNeil said he considers the project a success because residents showed an interested in the training, having seen many deaths in the buildings. More than 1,000 people have been trained through the program.

McNeil said programs like this one are just one part of the puzzle in stemming the overdose crisis.

“This is a crisis being driven by fentanyl and fentanyl-adulterate­d drugs and there’s an urgent need to ensure that people have access to a safer drug supply,” he said.

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