How Thunder Bay, Ont.'s increasingly toxic street drugs are driving overdose and death rates
CBC
It's a record they never hoped to break, and it's setting the tone for another turbulent year of fighting the opioid crisis in Thunder Bay, Ont.
Last month, Path 525 — the only safe consumption site in northwestern Ontario — responded to 38 overdoses. It's the most the site has ever handled in a single month since it opened in November 2018.
"It was a very difficult month for the community," said Jennifer Lawrance, director of health services for NorWest Community Health Centres, which runs Path 525.
At safe consumption sites, people can use illicit drugs they've purchased on the streets, in the presence of health-care professionals who can help address and reverse any overdoses.
In the four years Path 525 has been open, no one has died of an overdose on site.
But Path 525 responded to 67 per cent more overdoses in 2022 compared to the previous year.
In the Thunder Bay District Health Unit, 114 suspected drug-related deaths were reported in 2022. While that's down from the year before, overdoses are on an upward trajectory.
"I think the reality right now is that we're in a crisis, so resources are needed to address what's going on currently," said Lawrance.
The rising overdose rate is attributed largely to the unknown nature of what's in substances these days. In October, the site ramped up drug testing with a new piece of equipment that uses a laser to scan traces of substances.
Last month's testing yielded shocking results: Only 11 per cent of cocaine samples contained purely cocaine, and more than half of the samples had no cocaine at all.
Many clients thought they had bought drugs from a reliable dealer, said Keesha Bauer, Path 525's consumption, treatment and services co-ordinator.
"If you don't have a tolerance to opiates and you use this cocaine, you will die," Bauer said.
A lot of samples also contained a cutting agent called phenacetin, a pain and fever reliever that's been banned in Canada since 1973, after it was found to cause kidney and liver damage, and cancer.
People who use cocaine recreationally on weekends may be less wary of the unknowns in what they're purchasing, putting them at greater risk of an overdose. Bauer said bars should ensure they have naloxone — a fast-acting drug used to temporarily reverse the effects of opioid overdoses — at the ready.