Life expectancy in Canada may be decreasing as opioid crisis rages on - Action News
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Life expectancy in Canada may be decreasing as opioid crisis rages on

In an annual report on the state of public health in Canada, the country's chief public health officer said that for many years, life expectancy has been "steadily increasing." But the opioid crisis is expected to stop that progress in its tracks.

Deaths unlike anything Canada has seen since AIDS epidemic, chief public health officer says

Yvonne Clark looks through photos of her son Conner, who died five years ago of a fentanyl overdose. Despite her efforts to help educate other young people, Clark fears the opioid crisis will claim many more lives in Canada. (CBC Calgary)

The opioidcrisis may be causing a drop in Canadians' life expectancy, according to a report released Tuesdayby Canada's chief public health officer.

That comes as no surprise to Yvonne Clark, whose son Conner, 21, died on Thanksgiving in 2013after suffering from an OxyContinaddiction for almost two years. An overdose from a single fentanyltablet killed him, the Calgary woman told CBCNews.

"This drug is cruel. It's evil," shesaid."Kids are going out there and they think it's not going to happen to themselves, [that] they're invincible."

Clark, 54, now goes out and shares Conner's story with students, hoping to save lives. But she knows the enormity of the killer she's trying to fight.

"I really do think this drug is going to claim the lives of many more. And it's devastating," she said.

In her annual report on the state of public health in Canada,Dr. Theresa Tam said that for many years, life expectancy has been "steadily increasing," as it is in other high-income countries. But the opioidcrisisis expected to stop that progress in its tracks.

"This is the most significant public health crisis that we've seen formany decades," Tam told CBCNews.

Dr. Theresa Tam, chief public health officer for Canada, says the opioid crisis is expected to halt the country's steady increase in life expectancy. (Public Health Agency of Canada/Canadian Press)

Overdose deaths have been climbing, killingnearly 4,000 Canadians in 2017 alone. Canada hasn't seen deaths that could impact life expectancy like thissince theAIDS epidemic of the 1980s or the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, Tam said.

In British Columbia, the province hit earliest and hardest by thefentanylcrisis, drug overdose deaths contributed to a decrease of 0.12 years more than a month in life expectancy between 2014 and 2016.

Although the data is not yet available to determine whether there's a similar effect on a national level, Tam said thePublic Health Agency of Canada is working to find out and believesthe deaths of "so many people in such a short period of time will cause this dip" in other provinces and territories.

Average life expectancy already decreased in British Columbia by more than a month between 2014 and 2016 due to overdose deaths. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

The increase indeaths in the last few years seems to be driven by illegal fentanyl, as well as overdoses resulting from using other drugs including alcohol, benzodiazepenes, cocaine or methamphetamines in combination with opioids, the report said.

The U.S.saw a drop in life expectancy due to drugoverdoses for two years in a row, according to the Centersfor Disease Control and Prevention.

National data suggest the majority of opioid overdose deaths in Canadahave been men and individuals between 20 and 59 years old, but Tam cautioned that this may not reflect the reality in some regions.

"Emerging evidence from several provinces indicates that individuals living in poverty, First Nations people and those who experience unstable housing are disproportionately affected by opioid overdose deaths," she said.

The report, meant to be a glimpse at the state of public health in Canada for the year,focuseson substance abuse among youth, including alcohol, cannabis and opioids.

With files from CBC's Catharine Tunney and The Associated Press