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British Columbia

New inhalation overdose prevention site announced for Victoria

In 2017, smoking surpassed injection as the preferred method of consuming illicit drugs, according to the B.C. Coroners Service.

Located on Pandora Avenue, the new service is across the street from TheHarbour supervised consumption site

Close-up image of hands, foil and a lighter.
File photo: A person prepares to smoke fentanyl. (Elizabeth Withey/CBC)

A new inhalation overdose prevention service in Victoria is set to open in November on a temporary basis to help address the ongoing drug toxicity crisis.

Data from the B.C. Coroners Service shows thatsince 2017, smoking has become the most common mode of illicit drugconsumption, surpassing injection use.

Grant McKenzie of the Our Place Society charity said some drugs have become so toxic that one or two narcan kits what individuals normally carry are not always enough to stop an overdose.

"I've heard of cases of people who have gotten 20 doses of [narcan]," he said.

Located at 926Pandora Ave., the new site is across the street from Our Place Society and TheHarbour supervised consumption service.

Officials say The Harbour does not have capacity to house the inhalation service or theneeded venting upgrades.

According to McKenzie,peoplealready use an area across the street fromThe Harbour as a de facto inhalation site.

"The people you see on this side of the road they're all inhaling drugsthey're smoking heroinor crystal meth or crack cocaine," he said.

"And the reason they're doing it here is because they're near our outreach workers so if anyone gets in crisis they know there are peoplewe have paramedics on site that can save their lives."

Numbers released last month showthe toxic drug crisis continues to claim lives in B.C. at a brutal rate, with Vancouver, Surrey and Victoria experiencing the highest number of fatal overdoses.

In July, 184 suspected overdose deaths were counted across the province, tying it for the second deadliest month ever.B.C.is now on pace to surpass 2,000 toxic drug deaths in 2021, more than last year's record high of 1,734.

"The toxic drug supply is continuing to cause fatal and non-fatal overdoses at a tragic, unacceptable rate across B.C. and here in Victoria," said Dr. Richard Stanwick, Island Health's chief medical health officer.

The new supervised inhalation site is only temporary, say officials,because the property it is on is slated to be redeveloped by the City of Victoria at the end of 2022. Asearch for a permanent site is ongoing.

"We continue to add more witnessed inhalation sites because they save lives," said Sheila Malcolmson, the minister of mental health and addictions.

with files from Gregor Craigie