Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. overdose calls rose by 31 per cent in 2021

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2022 04:00 PM
  • B.C. overdose calls rose by 31 per cent in 2021

VANCOUVER - Paramedics and medical dispatchers in B.C. responded to a record-setting 35,525 overdose calls last year.

BC Emergency Health Services says paramedics attended an average of 97 overdose calls a day last year, a 31 per cent increase compared with 2020.

The agency says in a news release that overdose calls have steadily increased since 2015, and every health region in the province reported a rise in the volume of overdose calls last year.

It says the most calls came from the largest cities, with Surrey seeing the most dramatic increase with 3,674 calls, a nearly 50 per cent jump.

It says paramedics responded to nearly 10,000 overdoses in Vancouver, a 23 per cent increase compared with the previous year.

The Coroners Service has said that illicit drug overdoses are the leading cause of unnatural deaths in the province, with about six people dying each day.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

593 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

593 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
There are 5,937 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 182,045 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 345 individuals are in hospital and 144 are in intensive care. 

593 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Vaccine could be condition of federal employment

Vaccine could be condition of federal employment
Several unions have raised concerns about how the government intends to verify employee vaccine status, and Aubry said he also wants to know how that confidential health information will be stored.

Vaccine could be condition of federal employment

Gasoline use plunged in first year of pandemic

Gasoline use plunged in first year of pandemic
Statistics Canada data show Canadians bought 38.6 billion litres of gas in 2020, 14 per cent less than the year before and less than in any other year since 2001.

Gasoline use plunged in first year of pandemic

Military officer's new assignment sparks outrage

Military officer's new assignment sparks outrage
Yet survivors and experts of military sexual misconduct are expressing outrage over Maj.-Gen. Peter Dawe’s new role, saying it raises even more questions about the Armed Forces’ ability and commitment to addressing the problem.    

Military officer's new assignment sparks outrage

Report cites B.C.'s inadequate heat wave supports

Report cites B.C.'s inadequate heat wave supports
Human Rights Watch says in its report that while those two groups are at a greater risk of heat stress, many were left to cope with the dangers of record-high temperatures on their own.

Report cites B.C.'s inadequate heat wave supports

Public workers in B.C. must get vaccinated

Public workers in B.C. must get vaccinated
The BC Public Service Agency said Tuesday the requirement is part of an effort to increase vaccination rates throughout the province. It has set Nov. 22 as a deadline for workers in core government services or ministries to show proof of vaccination using the BC Vaccine card.

Public workers in B.C. must get vaccinated