Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Coroner To Release 2017 Figures Today On Overdose Deaths

31 Jan, 2018 11:24 AM
    VANCOUVER — Health officials and the Coroners Service of British Columbia are expected to release the total number of overdose fatalities in 2017 today, while the current death toll already exceeds records.
     
    The B.C. coroner has said 1,208 fatalities were recorded in the first 10 months of 2017.
     
    The powerful opioid fentanyl was detected in 999 of the confirmed and suspected deaths during that time, an increase of 136 per cent from the same period in 2016.
     
    The province declared a public health emergency in 2016 because of an unprecedented number of overdose deaths.
     
    The crisis has continued to plague the province into the new year.
     
    Last weekend, Interior Health said seven suspected overdose deaths happened between Jan. 23 and 26.
     
    The coroner is investigating the deaths, but the health authority has warned people to reconsider taking drugs or take extra precautions given the sudden spike in fatalities over a short period of time.
     
    Earlier this week, Mental Health and Addictions Minister Judy Darcy announced an advertising campaign in partnership with the Vancouver Canucks and Rogers Arena aimed at creating conversations about drug use and combating stigma.
     
    The province also began distributing free kits containing the overdose-reversing drug naloxone through pharmacies in December in an effort to curb the deadly crisis.
     
    About 1,900 kits were made available through 220 pharmacies provincewide.
     
    Kits were already available at hospitals, health centres and safe consumption sites and the province has said nearly 30,000 had been handed out in 2017 leading into the latest initiative.
     
    A new app featuring instructional videos developed by a team from St. Paul's Hospital is being used to teach people how to administer naloxone.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Carfentanil, Much Deadlier Than Fentanyl, Found In Downtown Eastside Drug Bust

    Carfentanil, Much Deadlier Than Fentanyl, Found In Downtown Eastside Drug Bust
    Last month, a nine-month-old boy in Manitoba was rushed to hospital after being exposed to carfentanil, which is so powerful that just a few grains can be fatal for adults.

    Carfentanil, Much Deadlier Than Fentanyl, Found In Downtown Eastside Drug Bust

    Foreign Home Purchases In Metro Vancouver Are Back To Provincial Average

    Foreign Home Purchases In Metro Vancouver Are Back To Provincial Average
      Finance Minister Mike de Jong says the government is scaling back the amount of money it expects to collect from the tax in this budget year based on the new figures.

    Foreign Home Purchases In Metro Vancouver Are Back To Provincial Average

    Pilot Dead After Alberta-based CF-18 Crashes During Training In Weapons Range

    Pilot Dead After Alberta-based CF-18 Crashes During Training In Weapons Range
    Col. Paul Doyle, commanding officer of 4 Wing Cold Lake, said Capt. Thomas McQueen, 29, was engaged to be married and his fiancee lives in the Cold Lake area. 

    Pilot Dead After Alberta-based CF-18 Crashes During Training In Weapons Range

    Medical Examiner Tells Calgary Woman's Trial Boy Tied Of 'Overwhelming Sepsis'

    Medical Examiner Tells Calgary Woman's Trial Boy Tied Of 'Overwhelming Sepsis'
    CALGARY — The trial of a Calgary woman has heard that her seven-year-old son, whom she treated with dandelion tea and oil of oregano, died from "overwhelming sepsis."

    Medical Examiner Tells Calgary Woman's Trial Boy Tied Of 'Overwhelming Sepsis'

    Look At This Threat: P.E.I. Police Vow To Play Nickelback Album For Drunk Drivers

    Look At This Threat: P.E.I. Police Vow To Play Nickelback Album For Drunk Drivers
    KENSINGTON, P.E.I. — A Prince Edward Island police department is threatening to impose the Nickelback treatment on anyone who drinks and drives.

    Look At This Threat: P.E.I. Police Vow To Play Nickelback Album For Drunk Drivers

    Study To Test Oral Cannabis Treatment In Kids With Severe Epilepsy

    Study To Test Oral Cannabis Treatment In Kids With Severe Epilepsy
    TORONTO — Researchers at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children are poised to begin a clinical trial using cannabis extracts to treat children with severe epilepsy whose seizures can't be controlled with existing medications.

    Study To Test Oral Cannabis Treatment In Kids With Severe Epilepsy