As smoking toxic drugs kills in record numbers, B.C. coroner calls for supervised inhalation sites - Action News
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British Columbia

As smoking toxic drugs kills in record numbers, B.C. coroner calls for supervised inhalation sites

Nearly two-thirds of the overdose deaths in British Columbia this year came after smoking illicit drugs, yet only 40 per cent of supervised consumption sites in the province offer a safe place for people to smoke, something the province'schief coroner says needs to change.

B.C.'s chief coroner says prevention sites need to accommodate people who smoke drugs

Three people wearing facemasks stand at a table, with medical paraphernalia and hand sanitizers visible on it.
B.C.'s chief coroner says more supervised consumption sites need to offer a space to smoke illicit drugs to reduce the number of overdose deaths. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Nearly two-thirds of the overdose deaths in British Columbia this year came after smoking illicit drugs, yet only 40 per cent of supervised consumption sites in the province offer a safe place for people to smoke, something the province'schief coroner says needs to change.

Lisa Lapointe said the latest data show 65 per cent of overdose deaths in 2023 came after smoking drugs, compared to 15 per cent involving injection, 14 per cent snorting and five per cent from oral consumption.

That's more than double the rate in 2016, when29 per cent ofdeaths resulted fromsmoking drugs,and up from the 56 per cent of deathsinvolving smoking in2021, according to a 2022 data report fromthe coroner.

The coroners' office notes that people can consume using multiple methods.

More than 1,600 people have died of drug poisonings so far this year, the coroner also reported last week, and nearly 13,000 have died since B.C. declared a public health emergency over the crisis in April 2016.

The Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions said of the 47 overdose prevention sites in B.C., only 19 provide the option to smoke drugs.

B.C.'s firstsupervised consumption site is a safe injection site, but Lapointe said methods for consuming drugs have shifted over time.

Injection was the most common method of consumption in 2016 before smoking overtook it in 2017, according to the coroner's office.

"If we truly want to reduce the risk, and reduce the numbers of deaths, and help make our communities safer, then there needs to be an acknowledgement that providing a safe place for people to use drugs is critically important,'' Lapointe said.

"And that includes a safe place to smoke drugs.''

A woman with shoulder-length grey hair wears a grey tweed blazer over a red shirt while standing at a wooden podium in front of B.C.'s provincial flag.
Data from Lisa Lapointe, chief coroner of B.C., shows nearly 65 per cent of overdose deaths in 2023 came after smoking drugs. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

Barriers due to stigma, costs

Those who study the topic say a combination of stigma, bureaucracy and a lack of political will are all obstacles to setting up more sites for smoking drugs.

While Lapointe's office has not made any formal recommendations, she said she's heard from community groups that there are not enough safe spaces generally to use drugs, but particularly not to smoke.

"Clearly, smoking drugs is much more popular now than injecting drugs. If we want to keep people safe, if we want to reduce the death toll from the opioid crisis, then we need to be meeting people where they are, and certainly [there's]a need to adapt policies, whatever they may be,'' she said.

Each month, B.C.'s coroner tells us how many more people have died using toxic drugs in the province. To mark Overdose Awareness Day, CBC British Columbia has put together an interactive project aiming to highlight the people behind those numbers.

Nicole Luongo, the systems change co-ordinator for the Canadian Drug Policy Coalition, based at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., said the rules around setting up safe inhalation sites are overly complicated but don't have to be, given the extra powers the government has to act under the public health emergency declaration.

"We are seeing harm reduction sites still being tailored around injection and the ability to introduce inhalation sites being really mired in bureaucracy,'' Luongo said.

"And they're expensive as well, to introduce the kind of equipment that would reduce risk for outside observers.''

In a statement, the Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions says local health authorities are responsible for the operation of overdose prevention services and they have been working to increase the number of inhalation sites.

It says considerations for implementing inhalation sites include whether there is a suitable outdoor space, particularly during the winter, occupational health and safety concerns and worker safety issues, primarily due to specialized ventilation requirements.

In B.C., community groups have set up observed inhalation sites usually in tents outdoors where peers monitor users for an overdose, but Luongo said they can face opposition from cities even though a 2016 provincial ministerial order allows overdose prevention services anywhere they are needed.

Nevertheless, she said local governments continue to pass bylaws that include zoning restrictions that are preventing the opening of both inhalation and safe injection sites.

"At times, we have seen progress being made toward the opening of a site and then, due to community pushback, the municipality will renege.''

WATCH | Inhalation sites face challenges across Canada:

Safe inhalation sites save lives. Bureaucracy makes them hard to build

1 year ago
Duration 5:50
The majority of opioid overdose deaths in Canada as much as two-thirds in some provinces are now caused by smoking drugs, but government red tape is slowing efforts to save lives. The CBCs Jonathon Gatehouse explores why it's so difficult to get safe smoking sites approved.

Calls for expanded crisis response

Luongo said that level of stigma is a sign for Ottawa to declare a nationwide emergency, and both the province and the federal government need to "actually enforce pathways for implementing things like harm reduction services, as well as access to a regulated safe supply with various options for administration."

B.C.'s Minister of Mental Health and Addictions Jennifer Whiteside was not made available for an interview.

In a statement, she said the government is doing everything it can to save lives and separate people from toxic drugs.

"That's why our government has rapidly scaled up overdose prevention and harm reduction measures since 2017. This includes significantly increasing the number of overdose prevention services from one site in 2016 to 47 sites as of July 2023, including 19 sites offering inhalation services."

Luongo said in the early years of the crisis there was more trust in smoking stimulants, which were less likely to be altered. However, that's no longer the case, with toxic additives being included in everything, she said.

She said Canada's safe supply programs, which provide regulated versions of some criminalized drugs, need to be expanded and include more inhalable options.

The province is on pace for anotherrecord-breaking number of people to die from toxic drugs in 2023. The Coroners Service said unregulated drug toxicity is the leading cause of death in the province for people aged 10 to 59, accounting for more deaths than homicides, suicides, accidents and natural diseases combined.