Medicine Hat News

‘We’re in a crisis during a pandemic:’ Friends, family talk about overdose deaths

- COLETTE DERWORIZ

Wanda Plain Eagle was picking up her best friend to help her arrange her son’s funeral when she came faceto-face with the opioid crisis in Alberta.

She honked her horn to let her friend, whom she affectiona­tely called Sissy, know that she was outside her house in Brockett, the Piikani Nation’s main community in southern Alberta.

“She wasn’t coming, so I went in,” Plain Eagle recalled during a recent interview with The Canadian Press.

As she walked in the front door that August day, she said: “‘Sissy, we’re going to be late.”’

Plain Eagle looked at the couch and saw her friend. She pulled Sissy off, started performing CPR and yelled out for someone to call 911.

“I knew she was already gone.”

The 44-year-old mother of seven children — Plain Eagle asked her friend not be named — was one of hundreds of opioid overdose deaths in Alberta this year.

Alberta Health reported 449 deaths from apparent unintentio­nal overdoses during the first six months of 2020. Some 301 of those deaths occurred between April and June. Data has not yet been provided for the second half of the year.

Family members said Sissy’s 27-year old son, Brent, died less than a week before his mom.

His grandmothe­r, Myrna Red Young Man, said he had been sexually assaulted and was carrying a lot of pain in the months before his death.

“He was trying to find comfort and someone to talk to,” she said.

Red Young Man said the family was making final arrangemen­ts for his funeral when word came that Brent’s mother had fatally overdosed.

She said she believes her daughter-in-law turned to drugs to cope with her son’s death.

“We had to make a double funeral.”

The family doesn’t know the official cause of Brent’s death, but Red Young Man said she knows her grandson was using drugs as he tried to cope with the sex assault.

“I told him I would get him some help,” she said. “But because of this COVID, it’s been hard.”

Experts have said the COVID-19 pandemic is playing a role in overdose deaths, which have grown in communitie­s across the country this year.

An update released by Health Canada Wednesday said there have been 1,628 apparent opioid toxicity deaths between April and June, the highest quarterly count since national surveillan­ce began in 2016.

The report said Western Canada continues to be the hardest hit, but the death rate has also risen in Ontario and other jurisdicti­ons. At least five provinces and territorie­s have observed recordbrea­king numbers of deaths from April to June, said Health Canada.

Elaine Hyshka, an assistant professor in the School of Public Health at the University of Alberta, said the main factor has been a disruption of traditiona­l supply lines for the illegal drug market because of border closures.

“People have had to scramble to access drugs,” she said. “There is - and continues to be - a high demand for opioids and other substances in the community.”

Hyshka said the drug market was already highly toxic and it has become even more volatile this year.

“People are not able to predict potency when they purchase illegal drugs and, as a result, they are running into trouble.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada