Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fentanyl A Main Cause In Surge In B.C. Drug Deaths This Year

The Canadian Press, 14 Jul, 2016 10:28 AM
    VICTORIA — The latest statistics from British Columbia's coroner's office show a large increase in illicit drug overdoses in the province.
     
    Statistics from the coroner's service show there were 371 deaths in the first six months of this year, about a 74 per cent increase compared with the same period last year.
     
    The service says the proportion of deaths where fentanyl was detected in toxicology tests jumped to about 60 per cent and that the drug was either used alone or in combination with other drugs.
     
    It says fentanyl-detected deaths are occurring regularly around the province, and in the southern Interior and on Vancouver Island the death toll in the first five months this year has exceeded all of last year.
     
    Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe is stressing the importance of calling 911 immediately if someone appears to be overdosing and says the use of naloxone can often prevent an overdose from becoming fatal.
     
     
    British Columbia declared a public health emergency in April when overdose deaths surged to an alarming rate in the first few months of this year.
     
    The statistics cover deaths from the age of 10 to 79, but the category with the largest death toll covers the ages of 30 to 39 and men were the vast majority of those who died.
     
    After the public health emergency was declared, the College of Physicians and Surgeons introduced changes that made it easier to prescribe Suboxone or its generic versions to treat opioid addiction. Paperwork linked to prescribing the drug was scaled back on July 1, with the college announcing it will no longer keep a central registry of patients in the methadone program.
     
    A BY THE NUMBERS LOOK AT BRITISH COLUMBIA'S ILLICIT OVERDOSE DEATHS IN THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF 2016:
     
     
    — 301 of the 371 deaths were males.
     
    — The age group with the highest toll is aged 30 to 39 at 116 deaths.
     
    — The Fraser Valley had the highest death count at 114, while Metro Vancouver's toll was 92, Vancouver Island counted 76, the Interior 64 and northern B.C. had 25 deaths.
     
    — Fentanyl was blamed or detected in 60 per cent of the deaths, compared with 31 per cent in 2015
     
    — In 2012, the proportion of overdose deaths where fentanyl was detected was five per cent.
     
    — From January to June of this year, there was an average of 61.8 apparent illicit drug overdose deaths each month.  

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Grand Opening Celebration of the Kwantlen St. Farmer’s Market

    Grand Opening Celebration of the Kwantlen St. Farmer’s Market
    The celebration included a children’s ‘Eat the Rainbow’ Workshop, traditional Chinese dance performances, comments from KPU President Dr. Alan Davis, Director of the Institute for Sustainable Agriculture Dr. Kent Mullinix and KSA President Alex McGowan. 

    Grand Opening Celebration of the Kwantlen St. Farmer’s Market

    Sikh Man's Turban Helps Save Life Of Struggling Teenage Swimmer Near Kamloops, B.C.

    Sikh Man's Turban Helps Save Life Of Struggling Teenage Swimmer Near Kamloops, B.C.
    Avtar Hothi and his son Paul were working at their family farm in Heffley Creek, just north of Kamloops, on Saturday evening when they heard cries for help.

    Sikh Man's Turban Helps Save Life Of Struggling Teenage Swimmer Near Kamloops, B.C.

    Sikh Veteran Lt. Col. Pritam Jauhal, Who Fought Over Turban Rights, Dies At 95

    Sikh Veteran Lt. Col. Pritam Jauhal, Who Fought Over Turban Rights, Dies At 95
    Pritam Singh Jauhal, a Second World War veteran who later fought for the right of Sikh men to wear a turban in the Royal Canadian Legion’s halls, has died at 95 in Surrey, B.C.

    Sikh Veteran Lt. Col. Pritam Jauhal, Who Fought Over Turban Rights, Dies At 95

    Local Mounties Expand Outreach To Surrey’s Diverse Communities

    Local Mounties Expand Outreach To Surrey’s Diverse Communities
    As we all celebrate Canadian Multiculturalism Day today, the Surrey RCMP is working to connect with the many diverse communities it serves both today and throughout the year with its Diversity Unit.

    Local Mounties Expand Outreach To Surrey’s Diverse Communities

    Work Starts On Smoother Surfaces For Several Surrey Highways

    Work Starts On Smoother Surfaces For Several Surrey Highways
    Several stretches of highway in the Surrey area are about to get a new look as work begins on a $5.2 million highway rehabilitation project for highways 10, 15, 91 and 99.

    Work Starts On Smoother Surfaces For Several Surrey Highways

    Abbotsford Police Seize 1141 Plants From Grow Operation

    Abbotsford Police Seize 1141 Plants From Grow Operation
    A total of 1141 marihuana plants were found on site and seized.

    Abbotsford Police Seize 1141 Plants From Grow Operation