Monday, December 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. investigates 'significant' opioid diversion, including international trafficking

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2025 05:28 PM
  • B.C. investigates 'significant' opioid diversion, including international trafficking

A "significant portion" of opioids prescribed by doctors and pharmacists in British Columbia are being diverted, and prescribed alternatives are being trafficked provincially, nationally and internationally, a Ministry of Health investigative unit says.

The leaked briefing that the unit provided for police that was distributed by the Opposition B.C. Conservatives also revealed the ministry has been conducting an investigation into an alleged scheme involving "incentives" paid by dozens of pharmacies to patients, doctors and housing providers.

Next steps will include targeting of "specific pharmacies" by law enforcement agencies, it says.

B.C. Health Minister Josie Osborne, who said the investigative unit was made up of former RCMP officers, confirmed the internal briefing's authenticity on Wednesday and told reporters in a virtual meeting that it was "disappointing" it was leaked and the investigation potentially compromised.

"I want to acknowledge that we know that this is happening," she said of opioid diversion. "These allegations are here. There's absolutely no denial of it. There's no diminishing of it, and there should be no acceptance of it. That's why we're taking the actions that we are."

Elenore Sturko, a Conservative MLA and critic of the solicitor general and public safety, said in a statement that Premier David Eby, his ministers, and provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry had long "denied and downplayed" the issue of diversion of so-called safe supply drugs. 

However, there was now "no doubt that the NDP government is responsible for fuelling addiction, deaths, enriching organized crime, and facilitating international drug trafficking,” she said.

The document says of diversion that a "significant portion of the opioids being freely prescribed by doctors and pharmacists are not being consumed by their intended recipients."

"When I first raised concerns with diversion in early 2023 in the B.C. legislature, the government chalked it up as misinformation," Sturko said in an interview.

She added that she was "confident that it's time for the premier to take action and immediately call a moratorium on unwitnessed safe supply."

Unwitnessed safe supply is when pharmaceutical-grade drugs such as opioids are prescribed for users who can take them away to use when and where they choose.

Former solicitor general Mike Farnworth and the RCMP's commanding officer in B.C. both said in March last year that there was no evidence of "widespread" diversion of safe-supply drugs.

Henry said in a report on safe supply last July that more research was needed "to assess the degree to which diversion is occurring" but added that "anecdotes may not reflect the experience of most people who are prescribed alternatives to unregulated drugs."

The internal document emerged as Canada faces the threat of a trade war with the United States, which demands efforts be made to stop fentanyl from crossing the border.

The 38-page document is undated but includes data up to December suggesting that about 20 million milligrams of hydromorphone was provided as a prescribed alternative from 2022 to 2024.

The slideshow-style briefing is titled "The State of PharmaCare" referring to the province's publicly funded program for prescription drugs.

It says some pharmacies are alleged to be "offering incentives to clients" with more than 60 pharmacies identified, and that some "community housing staff" require tenants to go to certain pharmacies for their prescriptions.

The document says some pharmacies are trying to maximize their dispensing fees by offering incentives. Other participants in the alleged schemes include doctors, assisted living residences and organized criminals, it says.

It also includes photos of drugs used in the prescribed alternatives program and in opioid agonist treatments, as well as prescription packaging and items described as "vehicle search results." 

Osborne said only a small minority of pharmacies were alleged to be involved in the illicit diversion schemes.

"To put this in scale, you know, we have about 1,400 community pharmacies in British Columbia, and this is a very small proportion of those where those allegations have taken place, but we need to let the investigations play up," Osborne said.

Osborne said the ministry will look at "all actions that need to be taken to increase safeguards and to ensure that the treatment that people are getting is going to the right people, and that we are helping to connect them to the support that they need to recover from substance abuse addiction."

The document says pharmacies target PharmaCare policies by seeking to maximize their dispensing fee of up to $11,000 per patient each year and that proceeds are often used to pay the incentives.

It said PharmaCare's total dispensing fees soared to roughly $350 million in 2024, almost triple that paid 20 years prior.

MORE National ARTICLES

MPs reject Trump's idea of clearing out Gaza as Israeli minister points to Canada

MPs reject Trump's idea of clearing out Gaza as Israeli minister points to Canada
Canadian politicians are pushing back on the idea of clearing Palestinians out of the Gaza Strip as an Israeli minister suggests some of them could be sent to Canada. The previous day, U.S. President Donald Trump stunned leaders across the Middle East and beyond when he suggested that the territory be cleared out and made into a U.S.-owned resort destination.

MPs reject Trump's idea of clearing out Gaza as Israeli minister points to Canada

Ottawa, provinces should discuss possibility of west-east oil pipeline: Wilkinson

Ottawa, provinces should discuss possibility of west-east oil pipeline: Wilkinson
Federal Energy Minister Jonathan Wilkinson says Ottawa and the provinces should discuss the possibility of an oil pipeline to Eastern Canada to improve energy security and diversify trade. Wilkinson said Thursday that United States President Donald Trump's tariff threats have exposed "vulnerabilities" in the Canadian economy, including in the energy sector. 

Ottawa, provinces should discuss possibility of west-east oil pipeline: Wilkinson

Federal government commits more than $160 million to Jasper recovery

Federal government commits more than $160 million to Jasper recovery
The fire-ravaged town of Jasper, Alta., has received two pieces of critical funding from the federal and provincial governments as it attempts to stabilize in the wake of last summer's devastating wildfire. The federal government announced on Thursday it's committing $162 million to the recovery in Jasper, Alta. — a portion of which is being dedicated to interim and long-term housing.

Federal government commits more than $160 million to Jasper recovery

Fast-track approval no guarantee of success for B.C. mines, researcher suggests

Fast-track approval no guarantee of success for B.C. mines, researcher suggests
The mining industry is applauding the British Columbia government's decision to fast-track permits for several projects amid the ongoing U.S. tariff threat, but research suggests economic factors have been behind long delays for many other proposals. Simon Fraser University associate professor Rosemary Collard says research shows that regulatory fast-tracking of mining projects is no guarantee that they will all materialize.

Fast-track approval no guarantee of success for B.C. mines, researcher suggests

Former human rights chief commissioner sues for defamation

Former human rights chief commissioner sues for defamation
At a press conference Thursday, Birju Dattani spoke about lawsuits he has filed against Conservative deputy leader Melissa Lantsman, media personality Ezra Levant and the Jewish advocacy group Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs over statements made about him on social media last year. One of the defendants has called Dattani's claims "baseless."

Former human rights chief commissioner sues for defamation

Five women sexually assaulted in B.C. 'grateful' for lawsuit victory, lawyers say

Five women sexually assaulted in B.C. 'grateful' for lawsuit victory, lawyers say
Lawyers for five women who were sexually assaulted in Vancouver decades ago say their clients are grateful they won a civil lawsuit against a man acquitted of the crimes due to state misconduct. The B.C. Supreme Court awarded the five plaintiffs $375,000 each in damages from Ivan Henry for attacks in the early 1980s, in a case that set off decades of legal battles over his wrongful conviction, for which he won $8 million in his own civil lawsuit in 2016.

Five women sexually assaulted in B.C. 'grateful' for lawsuit victory, lawyers say

PrevNext