Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toxic drug deaths in B.C. highest ever in 2021

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2022 02:58 PM
  • Toxic drug deaths in B.C. highest ever in 2021

VICTORIA - Illicit drug overdose deaths in British Columbia are second only to cancers in shortening the lives of residents to an average age of 44, prompting a call from the chief coroner to let go of old prevention measures that have been "an abject and very costly failure."

Premier John Horgan addressed concern and sadness over the number of lives being lost.

Lisa Lapointe said 2,224 suspected overdose deaths were recorded in the province in 2021, a 26 per cent rise over the previous year. There were 215 deaths in December, five more than in November.

"It is with tremendous sadness, that I report that our province is in a worse place than it has ever been in this drug toxicity crisis," Lapointe told a news conference Wednesday.

B.C. declared a public health emergency in 2016 when the powerful opioid fentanyl began showing up in deaths. Since then more than 8,800 residents have died from illicit drug overdoses.

While fentanyl was present in 83 per cent of toxicology results from 2021, Lapointe said a "significant concern" is the rise in benzodiazepines. Post-mortem toxicology findings from July 2020, showed the sedative benzodiazepines in 15 per cent of samples, which increased to 50 per cent in December, she said.

"This is a particular concern, as benzodiazepines significantly impair the lifesaving effects of naloxone used to treat opioid poisoning."

She said people administer the opioid-reversing drug as much as five times and it still isn't effective.

Lapointe said more people are also dying after smoking drugs. Safe consumption sites for inhalation are "very few and far between," she added.

"We believe that they think that it may be safer," she said. "But it is not. Smoking is just as dangerous."

The average number of deaths per day in 2021 was 6.1, but Lapointe said the number climbed to about seven each day in the last two months of the year.

The majority of those who died were male between the ages of 30 and 59, and youth under 19 represent about one per cent of the deaths, she said. The average age of death due to drug toxicity was 44, she added.

"Toxic drugs in B.C. cause far more deaths than all other unnatural deaths combined."

The status quo has cost the province millions in policing, emergency response, short and long-term health care and incarceration while creating social mayhem in communities, making enormous profits for the drug trade and devastating lives, she said.

"It's hard to see why anybody thinks that that's an effective system," Lapointe said.

"If the criminalization of drugs and drug users was supposed to reduce harm and prevent death, it is clearly an abject and very costly failure. It has resulted in shame, fear and punishment for people of all ages and for all walks of life."

Leslie McBain, co-founder of the group Moms Stop the Harm, said there has been little tangible action to stop overdoses since the public health emergency was declared.

"This isn’t about more treatment beds, more ads on bus shelters; it’s about a full health-care sector response led by the government to develop a continuum of care to support people who use drugs in our province," McBain said in a news release.

Lapointe noted that the coroners service found that prescribed safe supplies of drugs did not appear to contribute to the death toll.

Along with more access to safe supplies, she said there is a need for evidence-based treatment and recovery programs.

"In the face of the prospect of hundreds more lives lost many more of these programs are needed on an urgent basis," Lapointe said.

"People are dying on waiting lists. There are barriers everywhere."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. flood victims eligible for new support Feb. 1

B.C. flood victims eligible for new support Feb. 1
The B.C. government says in a news release that beginning Feb. 1, evacuees receiving Emergency Support Services since the Nov. 15 storms will be offered the expanded help through the Canadian Red Cross.

B.C. flood victims eligible for new support Feb. 1

2,150 COVID19 cases for Thursday

2,150 COVID19 cases for Thursday
There are 34,835 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 265,765 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 891 COVID-positive individuals are in hospital and 119 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.    

2,150 COVID19 cases for Thursday

B.C. high school snuffs out wildfire logo

B.C. high school snuffs out wildfire logo
The Lillooet Secondary School administration says in a letter to families the wildfire logo holds a different meaning after the fatal blaze that burned through Lytton, and the nearby Elephant Hill fire in 2017 that destroyed more than 100 homes.

B.C. high school snuffs out wildfire logo

Amardip Singh Rai wanted on 17 charges including sexual assault

Amardip Singh Rai wanted on 17 charges including sexual assault
Amardip Singh Rai is described as a 42-year-old South Asian Male, 5’11, slim build, with brown eyes, black hair and often has facial hair. He has tattoos including roses on his hands, scroll with words on his neck, a cancer ribbon on his neck and a tiger on his chest.    

Amardip Singh Rai wanted on 17 charges including sexual assault

Surrey RCMP make arrest for alleged personal robbery inside the ATM area of a Newton bank

Surrey RCMP make arrest for alleged personal robbery inside the ATM area of a Newton bank
On January 16, 2022, at 8:54 p.m., Surrey RCMP received the report of a personal robbery inside a bank in the 13600-block of 72 Avenue. The victim was depositing cash into the ATM when they were approached and allegedly robbed. 

Surrey RCMP make arrest for alleged personal robbery inside the ATM area of a Newton bank

Freeland asked to scrap carbon capture tax credit

Freeland asked to scrap carbon capture tax credit
More than 400 Canadian climate scientists and other academics are pleading with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland to scrap her plan to create a tax credit for companies that build carbon capture and storage facilities. Freeland floated the idea of the tax credit in last year's federal budget and consultations to design it ended just before Christmas.

Freeland asked to scrap carbon capture tax credit