Saturday, June 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. records 127 overdose deaths in September

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2020 10:14 PM
  • B.C. records 127 overdose deaths in September

The BC Coroners Service says 127 people fatally overdosed on illicit drugs in September, up from 60 deaths during the same period last year.

It says an average of four people died every day in September, but the number of fatalities declined from 150 in August and is lower than the record number of 183 in June.

The service says 70 per cent of the fatalities this year have been among those aged 30 to 59 and most of the dead have been men.

Fatal overdoses began declining in B.C. at the beginning of the year, with 79 fatalities recorded in January, but started rising in March as the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

An average of 179 people died of an overdose each month in May, June and July, raising alarms among health officials about the dual emergency of a pandemic and an overdose crisis.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry issued an order last month allowing registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses to prescribe safer drugs for those at risk of an overdose.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec police find new evidence in case of missing father

Quebec police find new evidence in case of missing father
The father of two young girls found dead over the weekend southwest of Quebec City may be desperate and looking for materials to ensure his survival, Quebec provincial police said Thursday, on the eighth day of their manhunt.

Quebec police find new evidence in case of missing father

Russian hackers target COVID-19 data: agencies

Russian hackers target COVID-19 data: agencies
Canada, Britain and the United States denounced Russian hackers on Thursday for trying to steal research on COVID-19 vaccines from organizations in all three countries and around the world.

Russian hackers target COVID-19 data: agencies

Canada no saint on Indigenous issues: experts

Canada no saint on Indigenous issues: experts
One of the oldest professional football teams in the United States is finally confronting a franchise identity after decades of criticism that it's racist — but experts say that's no reason for Canada to be smug about its own troubled history with Indigenous Peoples.

Canada no saint on Indigenous issues: experts

Family of police shooting victim seeks answers

Family of police shooting victim seeks answers
The silence inside the Campbells' home west of Toronto has grown like a cancer in the weeks since April 6.

Family of police shooting victim seeks answers

No PMO direction to choose WE: minister

No PMO direction to choose WE: minister
The federal youth minister says she was not directed by the Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's office to make an agreement with WE Charity to run a federal volunteering program, a deal that has since been aborted and mired in ethical questions.

No PMO direction to choose WE: minister

Ashton College - Live Online Education to Fit Your Career Goals

Ashton College - Live Online Education to Fit Your Career Goals
It is the focus on helping students be career-ready that has made Ashton College such a highly sought out school.

Ashton College - Live Online Education to Fit Your Career Goals