Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report

The Canadian Press, 24 Nov, 2015 12:37 PM
  • Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report
VANCOUVER — A new report says overdose deaths could be reduced in British Columbia if more doctors used a provincial database to track prescriptions for pain killers.
 
The report by the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS says opioids such as oxycodone are increasingly being overprescribed for patients who become dependent on the medication.
 
The report says only 30 per cent of B.C. doctors are enrolled in the PharmaNet program, which allows physicians to see if patients are abusing opioids by also getting prescriptions elsewhere.
 
Doctors can also use PharmaNet to ensure that opioids aren't being prescribed with other potentially dangerous drugs.
 
 
The report says that from 2005 to 2011, the rate of prescribing strong opioids in the province jumped by almost 50 per cent while dispensing of oxycodone went up by 135 per cent.
 
It says those prescribing rates conflict with increasing research suggesting that opioids may have limited long-term effectiveness for treating chronic non-cancer pain.

MORE National ARTICLES

Victims Of Fishing Boat Accident Identified As Vancouver Island Men: Coroner

Victims Of Fishing Boat Accident Identified As Vancouver Island Men: Coroner
The BC Coroners Service says three men who died when their fishing boat sank off British Columbia's coast lived on central Vancouver Island.

Victims Of Fishing Boat Accident Identified As Vancouver Island Men: Coroner

ER Visits For Potentially Fatal Anaphylaxis Doubled In 7 Years:

ER Visits For Potentially Fatal Anaphylaxis Doubled In 7 Years:
 A new report suggests the number of Canadians who visited hospital emergency rooms for anaphylaxis doubled in the last seven years.

ER Visits For Potentially Fatal Anaphylaxis Doubled In 7 Years:

Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics

Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics
Days before Toronto must decide whether to bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics, critics are sounding the alarm over what they call unprecedented secrecy surrounding the process.

Critics Sound Alarm Of Secrecy Surrounding Possible Toronto Bid For Olympics

Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids

Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids
Lawyers for British Columbia's Criminal Justice Branch are in court this afternoon applying to have child killer Allan Schoenborn declared a "high-risk accused."

Crown Takes First Step Toward High Risk Designation For Allan Schoenborn, Dad Who Killed 3 Kids

Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls

Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls
Sonia Singh, from Tasmania's capital Hobart, has won the Etsy Design Award for her project "Tree Change Dolls" by beating 52 other finalists selected by a panel 

Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls

B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder

B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder
Neil Snelson was found guilty in June of manslaughter for the killing of 19-year-old Jennifer Cusworth, who was beaten to death after leaving a Kelowna house party where the pair met.

B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder