Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Additional Sites Aimed At Preventing Drug Overdoses Open Around B.C.

The Canadian Press, 01 Jan, 2017 05:31 PM
    VANCOUVER — More overdose prevention sites are opening around British Columbia as health officials try to contain a growing overdose crisis.
     
    Vancouver Coastal Health said Friday it has opened its fifth site in a modified first-aid trailer in the troubled Downtown Eastside, replacing a pop-up tent that had been operating since September.
     
    Sarah Blyth, a former mental-health worker, said she launched the unsanctioned facility because she couldn't stand by and watch as people overdosed.
     
    "We are grateful for a warm, dry place, both for our volunteers and clients," Blyth, who is the new site's co-ordinator, said in a government news release about the small trailer set up in the heart of the Downtown Eastside, the neighbourhood where six people died in one day earlier this month.
     
    Teams of trained staff at the five Vancouver sites are providing people who use illicit drugs with a safe space to be monitored while they take their drugs. Staff are equipped with naloxone and are trained in overdose response.
     
     
    Dr. Mark Lysyshyn, Vancouver Coastal Health's medical health officer, says the staff and volunteers at the prevention sites are saving lives.
     
    "We want to make sure we put overdose response and treatment services where people need them."
     
    To date, no one has died at the overdose prevention sites, he said.
     
    Two overdose prevention sites operated by a local social-services organization have opened in Kamloops and the executive director of the group said about 100 people a day already use the facilities.
     
    Bob Hughes of ASK Wellness said staff are trying to use the contact with those who come in to offer additional help, "to be able to ask deeper, more meaningful questions about their current addictions issues, and the options they thought of in terms of getting off of street-level opioids."
     
    He said one of the sites successfully handled four overdoses over the Christmas weekend.
     
     
    In Nanaimo, an unsanctioned overdose prevention site that opened Boxing Day in the parking lot of city hall led to the building's closure on Thursday and Friday after unionized workers raised concerns about safety.
     
    But Coun. Gord Fuller, who supports the site, said people have been using drugs in a field next to city hall for years and it's no more dangerous than them using in the nearby parking lot under a watchful eye.
     
    "To say there's a safety issue now and there wasn't 10 years ago is ludicrous," he said.
     
    Tracy Samra, the city's chief administrator officer, said the RCMP, fire inspectors and bylaw staff are monitoring the site.
     
    She said they tried to call a special meeting of council to make some decisions about the unsanctioned operation, but only three of nine council members were able to attend and they didn't have quorum.
     
    The B.C. government declared a public-health emergency in April as illicit drug overdoses soared.
     
    The number of overdose deaths decreased slightly after the declaration, but began increasing again in September and peaked at 128 deaths in November, the highest death toll recorded in a month in the province.
     
     
    There were 755 overdose deaths in B.C. in the first 11 months of the year, a 70-per-cent increase over the same period last year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey RCMP Releases 'Naughty' List - Their Top Ten Most Wanted

    Surrey RCMP Releases 'Naughty' List - Their Top Ten Most Wanted
    Just In Time For Christmas Surrey RCMP has released a wishlist of sorts, a list of its top 10 most-wanted offenders.

    Surrey RCMP Releases 'Naughty' List - Their Top Ten Most Wanted

    In Rural Nova Scotia, A Refugee With Pastry Skills Helps Preserve Canadian Jobs

    In Rural Nova Scotia, A Refugee With Pastry Skills Helps Preserve Canadian Jobs
    "It's very critical to have him here," said Laura Mulrooney, owner of Julien's Bakery. "It is a skill. It's about the temperature, the dough, the machinery, the butter. He knew what to do. We didn't have to teach him much."

    In Rural Nova Scotia, A Refugee With Pastry Skills Helps Preserve Canadian Jobs

    Manitoba NDP Politician Mohinder Saran Disciplined In Harassment Probe Wants Full Reinstatement

    Manitoba NDP Politician Mohinder Saran Disciplined In Harassment Probe Wants Full Reinstatement
    Mohinder Saran was suspended from attending NDP caucus meetings a few weeks ago following a complaint that he had harassed a subordinate.

    Manitoba NDP Politician Mohinder Saran Disciplined In Harassment Probe Wants Full Reinstatement

    Regina Board Of Police Renews Reward Money In Two Unsolved Mystery Cases

    Regina Board Of Police Renews Reward Money In Two Unsolved Mystery Cases
    In 2010, the bodies of Gray Nay Htoo, his wife and their three-year-old son were found in their Regina townhouse

    Regina Board Of Police Renews Reward Money In Two Unsolved Mystery Cases

    Alberta Health Services Says Hepatitis A Discovered In Edmonton Food Handler

    Alberta Health Services Says Hepatitis A Discovered In Edmonton Food Handler
    EDMONTON — Alberta Health Services says customers of an Edmonton restaurant may have been exposed to a serious viral liver disease.

    Alberta Health Services Says Hepatitis A Discovered In Edmonton Food Handler

    Vancouver, Are You Ready to Take the Dip at the 97th annual Polar Bear Swim?

    Vancouver, Are You Ready to Take the Dip at the 97th annual Polar Bear Swim?
    Get ready to take the plunge with thousands of fellow swimmers and revelers on English Bay this New Year's Day. Daredevils can dress-up in fancy costume, compete in the Peter Pantages Memorial 100-yard swim race, or just come out to watch and delight in the spectacle! 

    Vancouver, Are You Ready to Take the Dip at the 97th annual Polar Bear Swim?