Benzodiazepines found in 55 fatal overdoses in July as contamination mounts in B.C. - Action News
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British Columbia

Benzodiazepines found in 55 fatal overdoses in July as contamination mounts in B.C.

Benzodiazepine, a prescription sedative often used to treat anxiety,is becoming increasingly common in B.C.'s illicit drug market, having been detectedin55 of the 192 fatal overdoses in July, according to the B.C. Coroners Service.

The latest trend in B.C.'s toxic drug supply is worrying users, advocates and physicians

A man carrying a small dog holds a pill in his other hand, over a garbage can.
Hugh Lampkin holds heroin in the Downtown Eastside neighbourhood in Vancouver, B.C. on Wednesday, Sept. 21. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The memory might be hazy, but Hugh Lampkinsays he will never forget the day he unwittingly tookbenzodiazepinein a desperate attempt to alleviate severepain in his back.

He thought he was taking heroin, before collapsing head-first onto a steel safein a back room at the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users headquarters on East Hastings Street.

"I knocked myself out because I fell down and hit my head," said Lampkin, a VANDU board member."I don't know what I was doing back there, I couldn't tell you."

In the two years since, he's managed to evade drugs tainted with benzodiazepines but many others haven't.

Benzodiazepine, a prescription sedative often used to treat anxiety,is becoming increasingly common in B.C.'s illicit drug market, having been detectedin55 of the 192 fatal overdoses in July, according to the B.C. Coroners Service. Detection rates among all tested drugsjumped from 15 to 52 per cent between January 2020 and January 2022.

The drug can be particularlydangerous when paired with an opioid like fentanyl, because the sedation increases the risk of an overdose,according to Health Canada.

Withdrawal symptoms can include extreme anxiety, sweats and dangerous seizures.

"Those drugs together I suspect havecaused a lot of death," said Lampkin.

A hand holds a pink pill above a garbage can.
Street opioids have become increasingly contaminated with benzodiazepines, which are found in as much as 40 per cent of drug tests, according to the B.C. Centre on Substance Use. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

More unpredictable outcomes

According to Dr. Paxton Bach, co-medical director of the B.C. Centre on Subtance Use, benzodiazepines are being found in as muchas 40 per cent of opioids tested provincewide.

"We already know our drug supply is volatile and unpredictable. The amount of fentanyl people are getting exposed to is very variable, and that alone causes enormous amounts of danger," saidBach, who is also anaddiction medical specialist at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver.

"When you add in other sedatives like benzodiazepinesand other psychoactive substances, it makes the outcomethat much more unpredictable, and it makes bad outcomes very, very possible and likely," he said.

Along with increased risk of overdose, Bach says it can also lead to significant periods of blackout sometimes for days at a time that make people particularly vulnerable to theft, assault, and sexual assault. People exposed tobenzodiazepinefor longer periods of time can go through withdrawals and experience seizures.

Orange pills marked 'Clonazepam' and '0.5', meant to represent generic drugs.
Benzodiazepines, like clonazepam, are sedatives used to treat conditions like anxiety, insomnia and seizures. (Joe O'Connal/Canadian Press)

Not easily reversible

Among the most troubling aspects of contamination is what happens once someone overdoses, Bach says.

"The Narcan, the antidote to overdoses, doesn't work on that component of the overdose," he said. "What that leads to is really long overdoses, overdoses where people might end up requiring more Narcanthan they need."

Sarah Blyth, executive director of the Overdose Prevention Society, says it's unclear exactly why the prevalence ofbenzodiazepine-laced opiods, which has become more commonly known as "benzo-dope," has grown over the past two years, but notes it likely has to do with accessibility and profit.

"Sometimes I think it's just easier to get certain drugs than others," she said."We see all kinds of additives to the drugs, so really it's just a terrible situation and people have just gotten accustomed to putting whatever they want in it.

"Everyone's just trying to make a bit of extra money," she said.

Two testing kits marked 'rapid response benzodiazepine test strip'.
A rapid response benzodiazepine testing kit, along with a fentanyl test kit, is pictured in December 2021 at a testing site for street drugs in Victoria, B.C. called Substance. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

Igniting calls for safe supply

As of July, there have been nearly1,300 fatal overdoses recorded in B.C. this year,setting a record for the first seven months of a calendar year.

The mounting death toll and prevalence of contaminated drugs continue to ignite calls for improved access to a safer supply of drugs for those in need. Last year, the province announced $22.6million in funding for health authorities to develop safe supply infrastructure.

"We need to invest in these programs and get them moving faster," said Blyth. "We should just find a way to get a safe drug supply to people who are using drugs who are not going to stop using drugs right now.

"We need to stabilize people's lives."