Saturday, January 24, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. addictions doctor resigns, placed on leave over unsanctioned overdose sites

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2025 12:55 PM
  • B.C. addictions doctor resigns, placed on leave over unsanctioned overdose sites

A Vancouver Island doctor involved in setting up unsanctioned overdose prevention sites has resigned from her positions with Island Health, claiming she was placed on leave as punishment for her public advocacy work.

Dr. Jess Wilder, a co-founder of the group Doctors for Safer Drug Policy, says in a resignation letter dated Feb. 5 that she's leaving her positions with Island Health "immediately." 

Wilder says she was placed on administrative leave on Jan. 22 from her physician lead positions in harm reduction and education, and addiction medicine at Nanaimo Regional General Hospital. 

She says in a separate letter addressed to colleagues at Island Health that she was placed on leave "pending investigation of alleged accusations" related to her "public advocacy work," though it says she will continue her clinical and patient-facing work. 

Wilder says the investigation is confidential and she directed questions to Dr. Ash Heaslip, with Island Health’s Addiction Medicine and Substance Use Program, and Dr. Randal Mason, the program's regional medical director.

Doctors for Safer Drug Policy set up unauthorized overdose prevention sites at the Nanaimo hospital and at Royal Jubilee Hospital in Victoria in November 2024, in an effort to pressure the provincial government to act on what the group says is an "unfulfilled promise to address drug use in hospitals." 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Student seriously injured in school bus rollover on Alberta highway: RCMP

Student seriously injured in school bus rollover on Alberta highway: RCMP
Mounties say a child is in hospital after a school bus flipped on a highway east of Edmonton. Officers were dispatched to the crash on Highway 16 near Vegreville after the lunch hour.

Student seriously injured in school bus rollover on Alberta highway: RCMP

Two people in hospital after accidental chlorine gas leak in downtown Saskatoon

Two people in hospital after accidental chlorine gas leak in downtown Saskatoon
Two people are in hospital after the accidental release of chlorine gas in downtown Saskatoon. Fire crews were called to the scene at Spadina Crescent and 21st Street East, where a Delta hotel is, around noon on Friday after a reported "hazmat incident."

Two people in hospital after accidental chlorine gas leak in downtown Saskatoon

B.C. chief wants Oscar-nominated residential school film to be part of curriculum

B.C. chief wants Oscar-nominated residential school film to be part of curriculum
The film "Sugarcane," directed by Secwépemc artist Julian Brave NoiseCat from Williams Lake in the B.C. Interior, and Toronto journalist Emily Kassie, received an Academy Award nomination this week for best documentary feature.

B.C. chief wants Oscar-nominated residential school film to be part of curriculum

TSB investigators deployed after boat crash and sinking near Squamish

TSB investigators deployed after boat crash and sinking near Squamish
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada says it has deployed a team of investigators after a collision and sinking of a workboat near Squamish, B.C., last month. It says the incident happened on Dec. 18. 

TSB investigators deployed after boat crash and sinking near Squamish

Critics denounce Vancouver mayor's 'Trumpian' plan to 'integrate' Downtown Eastside

Critics denounce Vancouver mayor's 'Trumpian' plan to 'integrate' Downtown Eastside
Critics are denouncing Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim's plan for revitalizing the Downtown Eastside neighbourhood, with former councillor Jean Swanson saying his proposal to pause supportive housing construction is "Trumpian."

Critics denounce Vancouver mayor's 'Trumpian' plan to 'integrate' Downtown Eastside

B.C. climate activist couple to live in Pakistan if deportation proceeds

B.C. climate activist couple to live in Pakistan if deportation proceeds
British Columbia climate activist Zain Haq and his wife Sophia Papp are planning to live together in Pakistan if his threatened deportation proceeds on Saturday, and blame his imminent expulsion on bureaucratic failings by immigration officials. Haq, a Pakistani citizen who co-founded activist group Save Old Growth as an international student, was granted a temporary resident permit last April, pausing deportation to allow his spousal application for permanent residency to be processed.

B.C. climate activist couple to live in Pakistan if deportation proceeds