Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Chief Coroner Denounces 'Fear-based' Fentanyl Campaign By Funeral Home

The Canadian Press, 04 Dec, 2017 01:54 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's chief coroner says the agency doesn't endorse what it calls "fear-based initiatives" after a funeral home launched a campaign to combat the opioid overdose crisis.
     
    Lisa Lapointe wrote an article that said although public education and awareness amidst the overdose crisis is important, scaring people from using drugs is not an effective measure in saving lives.
     
    Alternatives Funeral and Cremation Services in Langley, B.C., created a fentanyl prevention program in response to the high number of families coming to the chain every month after losing a loved one to an overdose.
     
    The chain's owner, Tyrel Burton, had said in a news release that the company felt compelled to reach teens and young adults before they become addicted.
     
    The campaign uses visual aids the company described as "powerful, perhaps even controversial" that includes a poster of a grieving family surrounding a coffin under the banner reading "Will fentanyl be the reason for your next family get-together?"
     
    The coroners service has reported that more than 2,000 people have died due to illicit drug overdoses in British Columbia since January 2016.
     
     
    Lapointe said fear-based campaigns tend to increase the stigma surrounding drug use, which can discourage people from seeking help. She said studies in the U.S. have found campaigns to discourage the use of illegal drugs among young people had no positive effects on youth behaviour and may have prompted experimentation with substance use.
     
    She said images in campaigns should also be used strategically.
     
    "Those with lived experience tell us that images featuring drug paraphernalia can act as a trigger, resulting in the desire to use and causing more harm," she said.
     
    Instead, she said advertisements focused on skills and strategies to cope with a threat are found to be more effective.
     
    She said data shows most of those who have died in B.C. were using drugs alone and health authorities and service providers have targeted their strategies accordingly.
     
    "In the long run, compassion and support, including prescribed medical treatment where appropriate, will be much more effective in turning this crisis around than fear and shame," she said in the statement.
     
    Alternatives Funeral and Cremation Services did not immediately respond to requests for comment regarding the chief coroner's statement.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Fights To Prove He's Alive After Bureaucratic Error Declares Him Dead

    B.C. Man Fights To Prove He's Alive After Bureaucratic Error Declares Him Dead
    Bryan Kupiak, who is 65 and from Kamloops, is healthy but says somehow his social insurance number was substituted for his mother's after she died in September.

    B.C. Man Fights To Prove He's Alive After Bureaucratic Error Declares Him Dead

    RCMP In B.C. Say Man Who Vanished In Okanagan Lake Has Been Found Alive And Well

    RCMP In B.C. Say Man Who Vanished In Okanagan Lake Has Been Found Alive And Well
    RCMP Cpl. Dan Moskaluk says rescuers searched the north end of the lake over the weekend after officers investigating reports of a prowler saw someone jump into the water.

    RCMP In B.C. Say Man Who Vanished In Okanagan Lake Has Been Found Alive And Well

    'Diwali Mubarak’: PM Justin Trudeau Celebrates Diwali With Indian Community - PICS

    'Diwali Mubarak’: PM Justin Trudeau Celebrates Diwali With Indian Community - PICS
      Trudeau Lit The Ceremonial Lamp And Wished The Indian Diaspora A Happy Diwali.  Several users were displeased with Justin Trudeau for using the word ‘Mubarak’ that has its origin in Arabic.

    'Diwali Mubarak’: PM Justin Trudeau Celebrates Diwali With Indian Community - PICS

    Boy, 10, Falls Down Niagara Gorge After Losing Balance On Railing

    NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. — Police say a 10-year-old boy was seriously injured after he fell about 25 metres down the Niagara Gorge on Sunday afternoon.

    Boy, 10, Falls Down Niagara Gorge After Losing Balance On Railing

    Loblaw Companies Lays Off 500 Office Workers In Cost-Cutting Drive

    Loblaw Companies Lays Off 500 Office Workers In Cost-Cutting Drive
    President Sarah Davis wrote in a memo to employees that some of the employees were informed Monday and many of the positions will be eliminated immediately.

    Loblaw Companies Lays Off 500 Office Workers In Cost-Cutting Drive

    Transportation Minister To Update Of Efforts To Bring Ride Sharing To B.C.

    Transportation Minister To Update Of Efforts To Bring Ride Sharing To B.C.
    Transportation Minister Claire Trevena has scheduled a news conference to discuss the government's next move

    Transportation Minister To Update Of Efforts To Bring Ride Sharing To B.C.