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British Columbia

Victoria overdose deaths renew call for supervised injection site

A recent spate of deaths likely caused by drug overdoses in Victoria have advocates renewing calls for a supervised injection site in the city.

'It's time that we start actually providing comprehensive harm reduction,' says social worker

Victoria overdose deaths renew call for safe injection site

8 years ago
Duration 2:09
'We supply people with safe, clean supplies and nowhere to use them. And then we wonder why people die,' says social worker Bruce Wallace

A recent spate of deaths likely caused by drug overdoses in Victoria have advocates callingfor a supervised injection site and better health care for drug usersin the city.

"We supply people with safe, clean supplies and nowhere to use them. And then we wonder why people die," said Bruce Wallace, assistant professor atthe University of Victoria'sSchool of Social Work.

"It's time that we start actually providing comprehensive harm reduction and we start addressing why we're stigmatizing and criminalizing people."

Fentanyl warnings

The BC Coroners Service said drugs are likely thecause of eight deaths in Greater Victoria over the past week.

Fentanyl alerts like this one have been posted by health officials in the greater Victoria and Vancouver areas. (CBC)

Health officials in Victoria and Vancouver have been warning drug users about fentanyl, a highly potent and dangerous opioid increasingly being mixed with illegal narcotics across the country.

The coroner is still waiting on toxicology reports inseven of thedeaths, but in one case, a drug overdose has been confirmed.

Theman, who died in a downtownVictoria parkade last Saturday, was found to have a mixed cocktail of drugs, including fentanyl,in his system.

Frequent drug users at risk

Of the 30 overdoses in the past few weeks in the Greater Victoria Area, five of them have been tied to a homeless camp near the city's courthouse, say officials.

Residents of Victoria's homeless camp erected a small memorial for a man found dead in his tent after a suspected overdose in December 2015. (CBC)

Residents of the camp say a man who lived there, Brad Paul, was found dead in his tent and have erected a small memorialin his name.

But, they say, they're concerned about more than just those who live at the camp.

"So many have died outside of just this camp, and they just get forgotten," said camp resident Sean Manley.

Many in the tent city carry an emergency kit that contains Naloxone, an opioid blocker that can quickly reverse the effects of an overdose.

It's a kit that some advocates say can play a big part in helping to prevent overdose deaths.

Naloxone kits like these can save lives, say those who advocate for opioid drug users. (CBC)

"These things save lives, everyone should have the training and a Naloxone kit on them," said safe injection site advocateDarrin Murphy.

The kits have only been available to the general public for the past year.

With files from Richard Zussman