Cape Breton Post

While B.C. wrestled COVID-19, opioid deaths shattered records

175 people died from illicit drug overdoses across province

- ROCHELLE BAKER LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER

B.C. recorded its deadliest month ever for illicit drug overdoses as fatalities from increasing­ly toxic street drugs continue to spike during the pandemic.

In June, 175 people died from illicit drug overdoses across the province, up from the previous record high of 171 fatalities set in May, the BC Coroners Service reported Thursday.

Peer advocates for people who use drugs in the Lower Mainland and on Vancouver Island are exhausted and angry as B.C.’S opioid overdose crisis, now in its fifth year, continues to steal lives.

“I’m just so devastated and saddened that the numbers continue to climb,” said Guy Felicella, peer clinical adviser with the BC Centre on Substance Use.

“I’m tired of records. And I’m tired of seeing people in my community die, and die waiting — waiting for access to a safe supply, waiting for access to detox, waiting to get into recovery.”

A total of 728 people have died in the province from illicit street drugs in 2020, with more than 100 deaths occurring in each of the past four months as the province struggles to manage dual health emergencie­s.

The cities of Vancouver, Surrey and Victoria are facing the highest number of fatalities during the overdose crisis in 2020, which is resulting in four deaths a day across the province.

A total of 68 per cent of the people dying from overdoses were aged 19 to 49, and men accounted for 80 per cent of the deaths to date in 2020.

Of the people who died, 85 per cent were found inside their homes or in a range of residences.

A total of 189 people have died of COVID-19 in B.C. since the pandemic began, according to data Thursday afternoon.

“We have two public health emergencie­s, and we’ve met the challenge of one,” said Felicella. “Yet the other continues on, getting worse.”

Success flattening the COVID-19 curve was the result of heeding scientific evidence and the advice of experts, such as provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry, he said.

“I wish we would do the same with her advice to end our overdose public health emergency,” said Felicella, referring to Henry’s repeated calls to decriminal­ize drug use.

“If we listened to Dr. Henry — and to the many other experts, from scientists to doctors to people with lived experience — I don’t think we’d be here today.”

Henry reiterated the appeal to the federal government to decriminal­ize possession of drugs for personal use as recommende­d by the Canadian Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police during her COVID-19 briefing on Thursday.

“I’m calling again on the federal government, to take this to heart,” said Henry.

“To take the advice of the chiefs of police, who know that this an important step that we can move forward on together. And there is no more important time for us to do that than now.”

“Do most doctors do that? No,” said Phillips, adding the hesitance of primary care providers is compounded by lack of support from the regulatory bodies that license medical profession­als.

“And what happens when they do (prescribe)? They get letters from the college asking why they are giving opiate prescripti­ons.”

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe also urged clinicians to support people at risk of overdose in a statement released Thursday.

“The risks of the illicit market are unmanageab­le, and access to safe supply for those with this medical condition is essential to save lives,” said Lapointe.

The coroners service has been examining toxicity results of overdose deaths and has not seen any evidence of a link between increased prescripti­ons, such as the presence of hydromorph­one, and increased fatalities, she said.

Phillips said it was also important people with substance use disorders were offered a wider range of pharmaceut­ical alternativ­es that met their individual needs.

“Many pharmaceut­ical drugs that exist are like opiates or street drugs. People need a menu of options, if not, you are missing part of the equation,” Phillips said, adding that making dicetylmor­phine, or prescripti­on heroin, more readily available would be one option.

“It’s simple. If you just give those to people … all these massive costs to society would just go away.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Substance use peer advocates like Jack Phillips of Victoria’s Solid Outreach want people’s access to safer drugs to be more immediate and varied in order to stall the climb of opioid overdose deaths.
CONTRIBUTE­D Substance use peer advocates like Jack Phillips of Victoria’s Solid Outreach want people’s access to safer drugs to be more immediate and varied in order to stall the climb of opioid overdose deaths.

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