Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver expands overdose response team

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2021 08:29 PM
  • Vancouver expands overdose response team

The City of Vancouver is providing funding for a permanent position to lead a program aimed at supporting people who have survived overdoses.

Mayor Kennedy Stewart says a "very important" pilot program that paired firefighters with staff from Vancouver Coastal Health will stay in place to help people break the cycle of overdoses by connecting them with support services.

Vancouver Fire Capt. Jonathan Gormick has been appointed to oversee the combined overdose response team after working with the pilot program.

Gormick says they've been able to reach people who are at highest risk of fatal overdose and those facing the greatest barriers to accessing care.

Over 20 months, he says they've connected more than 150 patients to a range of supports — from health care to housing and income supports — which ultimately reduces the likelihood of another overdose.

Gormick says the new position dedicated to leading the program means the team is working to increase its visits and improve how it locates patients.

"The program is patient-driven. Options are provided without an agenda. And we figuratively and literally meet patients where they're at," he said during a news conference on Wednesday.

Dr. Patricia Daly, chief medical health officer for Vancouver Coastal Health, said the joint initiative is an important pathway to treatment and care, which could help the city as it seeks to decriminalize simple possession.

"This is one of the programs that will help us convince the federal government this is the right thing to do, we have the systems in place here to help people and link them to appropriate care," she said.

The city expects to submit its final application to Health Canada for an exemption to federal drug laws by next month, Stewart said.

If approved, the exemption would put in motion the decriminalization of possession of small amounts of illicit drugs for personal use in the city.

"Decriminalization in our city will be a unique Vancouver model that fully embraces a health-care-focused approach and connects people with care and treatment, not stigma and criminalization," Stewart said.

Drug toxicity and overdose deaths increased with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and more people in the Vancouver Coastal health region have died from overdose since last January than from COVID-19, Daly noted.

"Those who died of illicit drug overdoses were younger on average than those who died of COVID-19, and yet we're not seeing the same public concern about these preventable deaths," she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec to impose 8 p.m. curfew for four weeks

Quebec to impose 8 p.m. curfew for four weeks
Quebec will become the first in the country to impose such a drastic measure to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus.

Quebec to impose 8 p.m. curfew for four weeks

Surrey man dead in city's first homicide

Surrey man dead in city's first homicide
This investigation is being led by IHIT in partnership with the Surrey RCMP. 

Surrey man dead in city's first homicide

B.C. reduces most of COVID backlog in surgeries

B.C. reduces most of COVID backlog in surgeries
Adrian Dix says operating-room hours were added to clear a backlog of surgeries that were cancelled in mid-March to ensure beds were saved for patients with COVID-19.

B.C. reduces most of COVID backlog in surgeries

Stolen Rolls Royce Phantom found in White Rock

Stolen Rolls Royce Phantom found in White Rock
The Phantom was confirmed stolen from a break and enter to a residence in West Vancouver from February 2020.

Stolen Rolls Royce Phantom found in White Rock

Failed electric cables blamed for Vancouver blast

Failed electric cables blamed for Vancouver blast
A statement from the department says fire investigators worked with officials from utility companies to determine that a fire in a car 30 metres away from the blast was also caused by the electrical faults.

Failed electric cables blamed for Vancouver blast

Some ICUs, morgues full amid COVID-19 surge

Some ICUs, morgues full amid COVID-19 surge
Canada has now seen close to 625,000 cases of COVID-19, about 16,300 of them fatal. The bulk of cases has been in the country's two largest provinces, where conditions have been deteriorating rapidly in recent weeks.

Some ICUs, morgues full amid COVID-19 surge