Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Opioid Use Taking Toll In Ontario With Hundreds Of Overdose Deaths: Report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2016 12:57 PM
    TORONTO — A study has found the use of prescription opioids varies dramatically across Ontario, but overall the potent and addictive drugs are responsible for hundreds of overdose deaths in the province.
     
    The study by researchers at the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network found 638 people died in 2013 from opioid overdoses — a rate of about one death for every 20,000 residents in the province.
     
    Lead researcher Tara Gomes says coroners' reports show almost 13 per cent of those overdose deaths were suicides.
     
    Gomes says the Thunder Bay District and Timiskaming District had the highest rates of opioid-related deaths in Ontario, about four times the provincial average.
     
    The researchers found there were 3,200 opioid-related emergency department visits in Ontario in 2014, which resulted in about half of those patients being admitted to hospital.
     
     
    "This report illustrates the considerable variation in both prescribing and adverse events across the province," said Gomes. "This information can be used to identify regions with the highest need for programs and services to address opioid addiction and overdose, such as addiction services, safe-injection sites and access to naloxone."
     
    Naloxone is a rescue medication that can reverse the effects of an overdose from such opioids as oxycodone, hydromorphone and fentanyl.    
     
    "These findings highlight the massive societal toll of opioid-related morbidity and mortality," said co-author Dr. David Juurlink, head of pharmacology and toxicology at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.
     
    "Prescribed with care, opioids can help some people, but it's essential that patients and doctors recognize the potential harms associated with use of these drugs."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Girl's Leg Broken During Cheese-Rolling Festival In Whistler, B.C.: Lawsuit

    Girl's Leg Broken During Cheese-Rolling Festival In Whistler, B.C.: Lawsuit
    VANCOUVER — A lawsuit alleges that an annual cheese-rolling competition in Whistler, B.C., went from fun to frightening when a runaway wheel of cheddar crashed into a three-year-old girl.

    Girl's Leg Broken During Cheese-Rolling Festival In Whistler, B.C.: Lawsuit

    Rare Comic Book That Could Be Worth Thousands Stolen In Vancouver

    Rare Comic Book That Could Be Worth Thousands Stolen In Vancouver
      The Vancouver Police Department says a 45-kilogram safe was stolen from a home, with the stack of valuable comics inside.

    Rare Comic Book That Could Be Worth Thousands Stolen In Vancouver

    Immigration Spike On The Table, But 450,000 Newcomers 'Huge Figure': John McCallum

    Immigration Spike On The Table, But 450,000 Newcomers 'Huge Figure': John McCallum
    McCallum suggests the recommendation — a 50 per cent increase in targets to 450,000 people a year, targeting skilled, entrepreneurial newcomers — might be too ambitious.

    Immigration Spike On The Table, But 450,000 Newcomers 'Huge Figure': John McCallum

    Canadian Humanitarian Missing After Small Plane Crash In The Dominican Republic

    Canadian Humanitarian Missing After Small Plane Crash In The Dominican Republic
    A Canadian humanitarian worker is among three people missing after a small plane crashed off the north coast of the Dominican Republic.

    Canadian Humanitarian Missing After Small Plane Crash In The Dominican Republic

    Justin Trudeau, Sophie And The Kids: Canada's Political Family

    Justin Trudeau, Sophie And The Kids: Canada's Political Family
    Upon taking office one year ago, the prime minister set the tone: Although he's Canada's leader, he's also a father with a young family.

    Justin Trudeau, Sophie And The Kids: Canada's Political Family

    Mystery Behind Fatal Plane Crash Poses Particular Challenge For Investigators

    Mystery Behind Fatal Plane Crash Poses Particular Challenge For Investigators
    VANCOUVER — Federal investigators have an especially challenging mystery on their hands piecing together what caused a small jet to crash last Thursday shortly after taking off from a British Columbia airport, sending out no distress call.

    Mystery Behind Fatal Plane Crash Poses Particular Challenge For Investigators