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British Columbia

Northern B.C. has the highest overdose death rate in the province. For one grieving mom, enough is enough

Nicole Lindsay, whose son died from a fentanyl overdose, is calling on B.C. political parties to make safe supply an election promise.

Nicole Lindsay, whose son died of drug poisoning, wants the next provincial government to save more lives

Parents who have lost children to drug overdoses gather beside Mr. PG in Prince George, B.C., for the city's first ever official declaration of Overdose Awareness Week on Aug. 24. Per capita, more people are dying from poisoned drugs in the Northern Health Authority region than anywhere else in the province. (Nicole Oud/CBC)

A grieving Prince George mother is beggingB.C.'s political parties to look past the stigma around drug users and make safe supply an election promise.

More people died of an illicit drug overdose in the province in the first eightmonths of 2020 than all of 2019, according to the BC Coroners Service andthis year's death rate is highest in the Northern Health Authority region, with 40 deaths per 100,000 people compared to the provincial average of 31.

While deaths were down across the province inAugust compared to July, that was not the case in the northern region, where the numbers have stayed high all summer.

Total deaths in the area this year so far is 80, compared to 66 last year and 100 in 2018, which was its worst year on record.

Northern Health illicit drug toxicity death rates have increased in recent months. (BC Coroners Service)

"It's just devastating to hear," said Nicole Lindsay, speaking Thursday on CBC'sDaybreak North.

Lindsay lost her 21-year-old son, Noah, to an illicit-drug overdose in 2018. He was housed, employed and as far as his family knew, doing well at work, when a fatal dose of fentantylgot mixed into the drugs he was using.

"He died alone in his room,"she told CBC in August. "That never should have happened. He should have had access to support."

According to B.C.'s Chief Coroner Lisa LaPointe, the spike in deaths in 2020 can be linked to the pandemic forcing more people to use in isolation, without anyone to call for help.

Discounted lives

After her son died, Lindsay said she no longer can read the comments sections on media stories about overdose deaths because she finds it re-traumatizing to see how many peopleare "comfortable discounting the lives of people who use drugs."

She said the stigma around drug use also factors into political policies drugsand this needs to stop. Lindsay is calling on those vying for election in October to make illicit-drug overdose prevention a campaign promise.

She is adding her voice to the many experts and advocatescalling for a safe supply of drugs to be made available to anyone who needs them, as well as the decriminalization of possession.

According to Chief Coroner Lisa LaPointe, most people who die of an overdose in B.C. die alone indoors. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

In March, the province expanded access to a safe supply of drugs including the painkiller hydromorphone as a substitute for opioids to users at risk of developing a COVID-19 infection, overdosing or going through withdrawal.

But many substance users and advocates, including Moms Stop the Harm (MSTH), which Lindsay is a member of, and the Vancouver Network of Drug Users (VANDU), say the program does not go nearly far enough, and the recent risein deaths proves it.

More than 1,300 people have accessed safe, prescription alternatives to illicit drugs since the province announced new guidelines for prescribing them when the COVID-19 pandemic began.

For more than a year, B.C.'s Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henryhas also beencalling for the decriminalizationof the possession of illicit drugs.

Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry, seen at a news conference on June 26, has for years called for the decriminalization of small amounts of drugs for personal use. (Michael McArthur/CBC)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he would not back decriminalization of drugs as apublic-health response to the country's escalating opioid crisis.

He made the comments during a Sept. 2 interview on CBC's The Early Edition,where he insisted that theapproach, while raised as an optionby advocates and medicalofficials across the country,is nota "silver bullet'' solution.

The overdose crisis was barely mentioned during Wednesday's speech from the throne.

Lindsay is not impressed. "This is an emergency situation and I think the government speaks loudly and clearly when it does nothing," she said.

To hear the complete interview with Nicole Lindsay on Daybreak North, tap here.

With files from Daybreak North and Ben Mussett