Friday, December 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Woman Says Drug Users Hold Solution To Growing Overdose Crisis

The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2017 10:57 PM
  • B.C. Woman Says Drug Users Hold Solution To Growing Overdose Crisis
VANCOUVER — Drug users are the solution to addressing overdose deaths and providing services to people before they die alone, says a woman who attended a meeting of health professionals in Vancouver trying to develop new strategies to deal with a growing crisis in B.C.
 
Karen Ward, a board member of the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, was among about 20 drug users who joined doctors, including the provincial health officer, and the chief coroner at the all-day meeting Friday.
 
Ward lives and works in the Downtown Eastside, where North America's first supervised injection facility opened in 2003 and multiple resources are available for people who use illicit substances.
 
She said there's less stigma in the neighbourhood compared with other areas where people often don't use available services, such as overdose prevention sites, because they feel stigmatized.
 
"We need to emphasize that we are not part of the solution but actually we are the solution. Through empowering drug users to take control of our lives we can find a way out of this," Ward told a news conference. 
 
"What we're coming away from thus far in (Friday's) meeting is that first, the war on drugs has failed. The war on drugs is a war on drug users and we're dying, thousands of us."
 
Ward said people in all sectors of society are dying alone in their homes so support networks need to be spread across the province to prevent the crisis from escalating further.
 
 
The meeting focused on the need for safer alternatives to the current drug supply and an examination of existing drug policy and stigma surrounding drug use in a province where 1,400 people have fatally overdosed since January 2016.
 
Dr. Mark Tyndall, executive director of the BC Centre for Disease Control, said it's time for policy-makers to use a patient or client-centred approach to deal with the overdose issue and that drug users are the ones with the "lived experience."
 
"The overdose crisis in B.C. and across Canada is not getting better," he said, adding about 140 people attended the meeting.
 
The City of Vancouver said Friday that more than 400 people could fatally overdose in Vancouver this year based on the number of deaths so far.
 
"That’s more than the total number of overdose deaths in Vancouver for the previous three years combined with no end in sight," the city said in a news release.
 
Twenty-seven people died last month, based on figures from the police department, the city said. Toxicology reports on the most recent deaths are not yet complete and the coroner also needs to confirm the final numbers.
 
Mayor Gregor Robertson said the city has no idea what the province did with $10 million in federal funding provided last February to address the overdose crisis.
 
Dr. Perry Kendall, the provincial health officer, said money was spent before the cheque arrived and the rest has been allotted to deal with the ongoing problem.
 
 
Kendall urged parents to talk to their children about the dangers of potentially deadly illicit opioids before end-of-school celebrations.
 
He said in a letter to be distributed at middle and high schools that 19 youths between the ages of 14 and 18 have died from overdoses since January 2016.
 
He said the youngest person was a 14-year-old who was experimenting with drugs.
 
"Non-judgmental and supportive conversations about substance use and overdose risks can save lives."
 
He said up to two-thirds of overdoses in B.C. are due to the painkiller fentanyl, which has been detected in other opioids including heroin, methadone and codeine as well as cocaine, ecstasy and methamphetamines.
 
Older children should be encouraged to take responsibility at parties where drugs may be available and call 911 knowing they will not face criminal consequences, Kendall said.
 
He said the overdose-reversing drug naloxone should also be provided and parents who are illicit drug users themselves should carry it and be prepared to perform rescue breathing before help arrives, potentially preventing brain damage.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Legislature Returns June 22, Stage Set For Confidence Vote On Liberals

B.C. Legislature Returns June 22, Stage Set For Confidence Vote On Liberals
Premier Christy Clark has said she expects to lose a confidence vote in the house after the New Democrats and Greens reached an agreement to allow the NDP to form a minority government. 

B.C. Legislature Returns June 22, Stage Set For Confidence Vote On Liberals

Trial Begins For Former RCMP Official Accused Of Sexual Assault

Trial Begins For Former RCMP Official Accused Of Sexual Assault
Michelle Booker told the judge hearing the case without a jury that former inspector Tim Shields also sexually harassed the woman at E Division headquarters in Vancouver.

Trial Begins For Former RCMP Official Accused Of Sexual Assault

Charges Expected Against Two Men Accused In Countless Heists From B.C. Mailboxes

VICTORIA — Two men have been arrested on Vancouver Island in connection with break-ins and thefts from mailboxes in several areas of British Columbia.

Charges Expected Against Two Men Accused In Countless Heists From B.C. Mailboxes

Christy Clark Sworn In A B.C. Premier Of First Minority Government In 65 Years

Christy Clark Sworn In A B.C. Premier Of First Minority Government In 65 Years
Legislature clerk Craig James told members of the Liberal caucus that journalists reported on an air of mystery and excitement at the legislature in 1952 and the same can be said about today.

Christy Clark Sworn In A B.C. Premier Of First Minority Government In 65 Years

Abbotsford Man Wanted For Sex Crimes Involving Children Arrested In Surrey

Abbotsford Man Wanted For Sex Crimes Involving Children Arrested In Surrey
Last night the Abbotsford Police Department and the Surrey RCMP located and arrested Jason Stanley WHITFORD.

Abbotsford Man Wanted For Sex Crimes Involving Children Arrested In Surrey

Witness Describes Man In Alleged Getaway Vehicle After B.C. Gang Leader Jonathan Bacon Murdered

Witness Describes Man In Alleged Getaway Vehicle After B.C. Gang Leader Jonathan Bacon Murdered
KELOWNA, B.C. — The driver of an SUV speeding from the scene of a gang murder tried to shield his face from witnesses but a woman who was leaving a coffee shop has described the man in B.C. Supreme Court.

Witness Describes Man In Alleged Getaway Vehicle After B.C. Gang Leader Jonathan Bacon Murdered