Lethbridge Herald

Nearly 1,500 die of illicit ODs in B.C. last year

- Dirk Meissner THE CANADIAN PRESS — VICTORIA

More people fatally overdosed in British Columbia last year compared with 2017 despite efforts to combat the province’s public health emergency, the coroner says.

Illicit overdose deaths increased to 1,489 in 2018, slightly higher than the 1,486 deaths recorded in 2017, the BC Coroners Service said Thursday. But it said last year’s total is likely to go higher as death investigat­ions conclude.

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe said the province must be ready to do things differentl­y to save lives, adding that the drug supply is unpredicta­ble and the opioid fentanyl was detected in 86 per cent of the overdose deaths.

“Substance use disorder is a health issue and forcing those attempting to manage their health issue to buy unpredicta­ble and often toxic substances from unscrupulo­us profit-motivated trafficker­s is unacceptab­le,” she told a news conference.

Fentanyl is a highly potent and addictive opioid that is estimated to be up to 100 times stronger than morphine. It is commonly mixed into opioids sold on the street, meaning users don’t know the potency of the drugs they take.

Mental Health and Addictions Minister Judy Darcy acknowledg­ed the overdose crisis is continuing to take a toll on families throughout B.C. despite the province using “every available tool” to deal with it.

“By the end of this day, four people will die from an overdose in British Columbia,” she said in a news release. “Most of these people will die alone, with no one beside them, no one to call for help.”

The provincial health officer declared a public health emergency almost three years ago in B.C. as the number of drug overdoses and deaths rose.

The figures for 2018 show middle-aged men are overrepres­ented in the death toll, with 80 per cent of the suspected fatalities involving males. People aged 30 to 59 accounted for 71 per cent of the deaths.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said people who use drugs need treatment options, rather than sending them to the criminal justice system.

She said people at risk of overdose should also have fewer barriers to a regulated supply of opioids.

“If we’re going to turn the corner on this complex crisis, we need to find the ways to provide safer alternativ­es to the unregulate­d and highly toxic drug supply and to end the stigma associated with criminaliz­ation of people who use drugs,” she said.

Dr. Evan Wood, executive director with the BC Centre on Substance Use, said there’s an urgent need to end the harms caused by prohibitio­n.

“It’s incumbent for all of us to keep the pressure on and not get complacent,” he said at a news conference. “Fentanyl, unfortunat­ely, is something that’s not going away.”

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? A man sits on a sidewalk along East Hastings Street in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside Thursday.
Canadian Press photo A man sits on a sidewalk along East Hastings Street in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside Thursday.

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