Times Colonist

B.C.’s Indigenous OD deaths ‘alarming’

10-year study determines that connectedn­ess to First Nations culture crucial to building resilience after trauma

- CAMILLE BAINS

Indigenous drug users in British Columbia are 13 times more likely to die compared with other Canadians of the same age, says a decade-long study calling for cultural connection­s as a path to healing deep-rooted pain.

The study conducted by the Cedar Project Partnershi­p of First Nations groups and researcher­s included 610 Indigenous people who smoked or injected drugs in Vancouver and Prince George and were between the ages of 14 and 30.

Forty people died during the study period between 2003 and 2014, and 65 per cent of them were women, says the study published Monday in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal.

“The death rates among young Indigenous people who use drugs reported in this study are appalling and must be viewed as a public health and human rights issue,” the study said.

An additional 26 participan­ts have died since the research was completed, and 15 of them had overdosed. Illness — including hepatitis C and HIV — and suicide were the next causes of death, it said.

The ongoing Cedar Project is based at the B.C. Children’s Hospital Research Institute and has been examining links between historical traumas, such as residentia­l schools, childhood sexual abuse and child welfare systems, on HIV and hepatitis C infection among young Indigenous drug users.

Researcher­s from the University of British Columbia, the University of Northern British Columbia, the Vancouver Native Health Society and the Canadian Aboriginal AIDS Network were among those involved in the study.

“It is possible that some of the overdoses observed were in fact suicides,” it said, adding previous findings by the Cedar Project indicate trauma affecting generation­s of Indigenous people might lead to “rejection of life itself.”

Suicide prevention must include a holistic approach to mental well-being that incorporat­es Indigenous culture, including ceremony and traditiona­l languages, the study said.

“Indigenous leaders in Canada are concerned that their young people are dying prematurel­y, particular­ly those involved in the child welfare system, those entrenched in substance use and those living with HIV or hepatitis C.”

Researcher Dr. Martin Schechter, a professor in the school of population and public health at UBC, said autonomy among First Nations communitie­s to promote health within their own culture is a crucial need to protect young people.

“Our research has also shown that people in the Cedar cohort who reported more contact with Indigenous culture by attending ceremonies or speaking the native language, those people were more resilient, had less risk than people who didn’t,” he said.

The study shows women are using more drugs, perhaps as a form of self-medication, to cope with childhood trauma, Schechter said.

“It seems like trauma, and historical trauma, is having more of an effect on the young women than the men.”

Karen Urbanoski, a scientist at the Centre for Addictions Research of British Columbia, said in a related commentary in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal that the findings point to the need for tailored services and policies for Indigenous people, who have poorer health, on average, than their non-Indigenous counterpar­ts.

“First Nations, Métis and Inuit people in Canada also carry a disproport­ionate burden of the harms related to substance use,” she said, adding there’s evidence people who identify as Indigenous are less likely to receive treatment for substance use and those who access it are likely to drop out.

In August, the First Nations Health Authority released data suggesting Indigenous people of all ages are five times more likely to overdose and three times more likely to die from overdose than others.

Dr. Shannon McDonald, deputy chief medical officer of the health authority, said a significan­t number of youth in the study were specifical­ly identified as having been in the child welfare system.

“The rates of apprehensi­on are very high among First Nations and Aboriginal people, so many of these people have never had the opportunit­y to be connected,” she said.

McDonald said First Nations groups are working hard on community-led, community designed programs, especially for youth who have been separated from families and communitie­s for most of their lives.

 ??  ?? The 2,224 wooden stakes placed on the ground at Oppenheime­r Park in Vancouver in September represent the number of confirmed overdose deaths in B.C. over the past three years, many of them painted with names of victims.
The 2,224 wooden stakes placed on the ground at Oppenheime­r Park in Vancouver in September represent the number of confirmed overdose deaths in B.C. over the past three years, many of them painted with names of victims.

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