Friday, March 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Deadliest February yet for B.C. overdose deaths

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Mar, 2021 08:43 PM
  • Deadliest February yet for B.C. overdose deaths

British Columbia has recorded its deadliest February yet for illicit drug overdoses with 155 lives lost last month.

The BC Coroners Service says it is the 11th consecutive month in which the province has recorded more than 100 fatalities.

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe says in a news release that the number of deaths highlights the ongoing critical risk to public health and safety from the illicit drug market.

The number of deaths also marks an increase of 107 per cent over February 2020, and makes last month the second consecutive month in which the average number of daily deaths was above five.

The coroners service also says 15 per cent of lives lost so far in 2021 were people over 60, and 40 per cent were over 50, continuing a trend that has been seen in older age groups in recent years.

The service says increased variability and toxicity in the drug supply continues to significantly contribute to the overall number of suspected deaths.

Carfentanil, a more lethal analogue of fentanyl, was detected in 18 of the 155 deaths, an increase from the January total of 14, the largest monthly figure recorded since April 2019.

"This data emphasizes the alarming increase in the toxicity of the illicit drug supply throughout B.C.," Lapointe said in the release Wednesday.

"Across the province, the risk of serious harm or death is very real for anyone using a substance purchased from the illicit market. Decisive action is urgently needed to ensure an accessible, regulated safe supply and to provide people with the supervised consumption, treatment and recovery services they need."

Sheila Malcolmson, minister of mental health and addictions, said in a statement the 155 deaths in February are a "heartbreaking loss."

“We know people are hurting now, and we must do more to stop this terrible surge in overdose deaths. Stigma and criminalization are driving people to use alone, and the pandemic is pushing people further into isolation."

She said in 2019, before the pandemic, B.C. had brought overdose deaths down for the first time since 2012.

The province has added more supervised consumption services, increased access to naloxone and improved treatment options, she said, and that saved lives.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ex-MP Raj Grewal heading to trial in October

Ex-MP Raj Grewal heading to trial in October
Raj Grewal is scheduled to go before an Ontario judge in an eight-week criminal trial starting Oct. 18.

Ex-MP Raj Grewal heading to trial in October

One man hurt in shooting in Surrey, B.C

One man hurt in shooting in Surrey, B.C
The injured man was found in a residential area of central Surrey suffering from a gunshot wound.

One man hurt in shooting in Surrey, B.C

Surrey man Gurmandeep Singh Atwal arrested for personating a Peace Officer

Surrey man Gurmandeep Singh Atwal arrested for personating a Peace Officer
Surrey man allegedly posed as a peace officer at a home in Richmond on the evening of January 29th, 2021.

Surrey man Gurmandeep Singh Atwal arrested for personating a Peace Officer

COVID-19 cases ticking up after slow drop: Henry

COVID-19 cases ticking up after slow drop: Henry
Dr. Henry says that over the past four days, 1,533 new cases have been confirmed across British Columbia and 26 more people have died.

COVID-19 cases ticking up after slow drop: Henry

NDP calls for military support in vaccine rollout

NDP calls for military support in vaccine rollout
The federal government should engage military personnel along with more medical and nursing students and retired health-care workers to ramp up Canada's faltering vaccine rollout, Singh said Tuesday.

NDP calls for military support in vaccine rollout

SFU reports data breach through cyberattack

SFU reports data breach through cyberattack
The university says the breach mostly involved student or employee identification numbers and at least one other data element, such as admission or academic standing.

SFU reports data breach through cyberattack