More than 1,420 people died of illicit-drug overdoses in B.C. in 2017, the 'most tragic year ever': coroner
Fentanyl caused more than 80% of suspected deaths last year
Lisa Lapointe said the preliminary total for the year is at 1,422 — an increase of 43 per cent from 2016 — but that figure will grow as test results continue to come in.
Approximately 81 per cent of suspected deaths last year involved the opioid fentanyl. Lapointe said it was often combined with other illicit drugs — most often heroin, cocaine or methamphetamines.
"If not for fentanyl, we wouldn't be seeing the deaths we're seeing," she said Wednesday.
Vancouver saw the highest number of deadly overdoses last year, followed by Surrey and Victoria.
The coroners service said nobody died at any supervised consumption site or at any of the drug overdose prevention sites.
The provincial health crisis, first declared in 2016, has continued into the new year: nine deaths were reported over five days in the B.C. Interior last week.
Provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall, speaking on his last day before retirement, said the numbers show the province is still in the middle of an "epidemic of poisoning deaths."
Indigenous people in B.C. were also disproportionately affected by the crisis in 2017 — Dr. Patricia Daly said they accounted for 10 per cent of all illicit overdose deaths in B.C. last year, even though they only represent 3.4 per cent of the provincial population.
'Cautiously optimistic'
However, Daly said there is a glimmer of hope in the numbers.She said statistics show a "significant decrease" in deaths over the last four months of 2017: an average of 96 deaths per month from September to December, compared with the first eight months of the year when there were more than 129 deaths per month.
Daly said she's "cautiously optimistic" about the 25 per cent drop.
"Things are moving in a better direction ... but I'd say it's too early to say it's an ongoing downward trend," she said.
She says the crisis is affecting the province's "most vulnerable" people.
"It's not surprising that we're still in the middle of a crisis and that people are still dying," said Blyth. "More action has to be taken — immediate action — with expanding safe access drug programs so that people are not taking a lethal dose of something that's going to kill them."
She also said the stigma associated with drug addiction — something Kendall called a "chronic, relapsing health condition" — can be deadly.
"[Users] don't want anyone to know [they're using] ... They use home alone in shame and that's when they die."
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