Canada has seen more than 8,000 apparent opioid deaths since 2016
The opioid crisis killed at least 1,036 Canadians between January and March 2018
At
least 1,036 Canadians died in the first three months of this year of
what appeared to be opioid overdoses, raising the opioid epidemic's
national death toll to more than 8,000 people since January
2016, according to newly released government figures.
According to the Public Health Agency of Canada's latest trend report, 94 per cent of the deaths between January and March of this year were accidental and most of those deaths involved the powerful pain medication fentanyl.
"The latest data suggest that the crisis is not abating," said Chief Public Health Officer of Canada Dr. Theresa Tam and Dr. Robert Strang, Nova Scotia's chief medical officer of health, in a joint statement.
They co-chair the government's special advisory committee on the opioid overdose epidemic.
The report
shows Western Canada — particularly British Columbia and Alberta —
remains the region of the country hardest hit by the epidemic, but no
province has gone unscathed.
Men continue to be among the demographics hardest hit by opioid deaths. More than three quarters of the apparent victims of fatal opioid overdoses in 2018 were men.
The federal health minister said there was no silver-bullet solution to solving the opioid crisis sweeping across the country.
"The numbers that have been released today are nothing but tragic, actually. We see that the numbers are continuing," said Ginette Petitpas-Taylor. "As the health minister, it's certainly the number 1 priority that I am dealing with."
According to the Public Health Agency of Canada's latest trend report, 94 per cent of the deaths between January and March of this year were accidental and most of those deaths involved the powerful pain medication fentanyl.
"The latest data suggest that the crisis is not abating," said Chief Public Health Officer of Canada Dr. Theresa Tam and Dr. Robert Strang, Nova Scotia's chief medical officer of health, in a joint statement.
They co-chair the government's special advisory committee on the opioid overdose epidemic.
Men continue to be among the demographics hardest hit by opioid deaths. More than three quarters of the apparent victims of fatal opioid overdoses in 2018 were men.
The federal health minister said there was no silver-bullet solution to solving the opioid crisis sweeping across the country.
"The numbers that have been released today are nothing but tragic, actually. We see that the numbers are continuing," said Ginette Petitpas-Taylor. "As the health minister, it's certainly the number 1 priority that I am dealing with."
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Health Minister on opioid deaths
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The numbers are expected to change as more data are made available.
The health agency also released the results of a study it did with
coroners, medical examiners and toxicologists from across the country.
While
the interviewees noted they saw deaths occur in multiple socioeconomic
categories, the most frequently observed characteristics of opioid
overdose victims included a history of mental health concerns, substance
use disorder, decreased drug tolerance, being alone at the time of the
overdose and a lack of social support.
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