Opioid crisis in Greater Sudbury worsens amid service closures, high overdose rates - Action News
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Sudbury

Opioid crisis in Greater Sudbury worsens amid service closures, high overdose rates

Greater Sudbury is grappling with a worsening opioid crisis, exacerbated by high overdose rates and recent service closures.

'There doesn't seem to be any wheeling or any signs that it's slowing down,' public health nurse says

An open area with rows of white crosses.
The Crosses for Change in downtown Sudbury are a reminder of lives lost to the opioid crisis. Each white cross was placed in memory of a person who died of an overdose. (Jonathan Migneault/CBC)

New data from Public Health Sudbury and Districts and Greater Sudbury Paramedic Services suggestthe opioid crisis continues to be a major issue in the region.

In 2023, opioids were involved in 74 per cent of all drug poisoning deaths.

Between January and July this year, Greater Sudbury Paramedic Services responded to 384 suspected opioid-related incidents, a two per cent increase from the same period last year. However, emergency department visits and deaths related to opioids are still higher than the Ontario rate.

From January to July, there were 162 emergency visits per 100,000 people in the region, compared to Ontario's average of 71 visits per 100,000 people per year. The local mortality rate is 44 deaths per 100,000 people, while the annual provincial rate is 15 deaths per 100,000 people.

Rachelle Roy, a public health nurse, saidthe unique challenges in the north contribute to the statistics.

"We have a very volatile toxic drug supply and we know that new drugs are being added all the time. We have a much more physically demanding work environment, thinking about the mining industry, forestry, construction as well as we know that we do have decreased access to essential services like mental health, harm reduction and treatment."

Roy said therecent closures of critical services haveexacerbatedthe issue. In March, Sudbury's supervised consumption site, known as the Spot, closed after waiting two years for provincial funding that never arrived. The Sudbury Action Centre for Youth (SACY) closed around the same time.

"With the recent closure of our local supervised consumption site and SACY, people who used to depend on that service may be at increased risk of using now the closure of the Spot will likely result in preventable deaths."

Ali Farooq, who runs the mobile outreach program The Go-Give Project, has seen the impact of these closures first hand.

A man wearing a jacket smiles at camera
Ali Farooq, with the Go-Give Project, has been providing outreach to the individuals living in the encampment at Memorial Park since they first started living there in June 2021. (Angela Gemmill/ CBC)

"We're seeing more and more youth under the age of 18 that are experiencing homelessness who are getting into opioid use with overdoses as well.There doesn't seem to be anysigns that it'sslowing down, unfortunately."

Farooqalso noted the effects of opioid addiction extend beyond the users themselves, affecting their families.

"Opioids are a highly addictive substance. It doesn't take very long for the body to develop a dependence on it, especially with the type of opioids that we're dealing with these days you don't know what sort of drugs they are getting access to, ifthey're going to overdose, who they're with, where they are."

He is calling on the government to invest in more addiction treatment and mental health services.