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In Alberta, 2023 was officially the deadliest year from opioid overdoses on record

In Alberta, 2023 was officially the deadliest year from opioid overdoses on record

CBC
Tuesday, May 21, 2024 12:39:00 AM UTC

More Albertans died from opioid overdoses last year than any other year on record.

CBC News reported earlier this year that 2023 was expected to be the deadliest year from drug poisonings — and now, provincial numbers confirm it.

Newly released data on the province's substance use surveillance system shows opioids claimed the lives of 1,827 people in 2023.

The previous record was set in 2021, when 1,639 people died.

Petra Schulz, co-founder of Moms Stop the Harm, says these are more than just numbers. Her son died from an accidental fentanyl overdose a decade ago.

"I see their grieving mothers and families rather than the numbers. But what I also see is a catastrophic policy failure on behalf of our province," said Schulz.

The Alberta government says its committed to a recovery-oriented approach to addiction.

Schulz says she supports evidence-based, voluntary treatment — but that there are major gaps in the province's system.

"We have to keep people alive and that's where the province of Alberta is failing. They're failing to keep people alive long enough to ever reach that point where they could go into treatment," she said.

A spokesperson for Minister of Mental Health and Addiction Dan Williams says they send condolences to all families, loved ones and communities of those affected by the opioid crisis.

"While the amount of people losing their lives to addiction is concerning, we are cautiously optimistic about the downward trend in the first two months of 2024. February of this year shows a 33 per cent decrease in fatalities compared to February of last year and is the lowest number of all substance fatalities in nearly four years," said Hunter Barill, Williams' press secretary.

In the first two months of 2024, 237 Albertans fatally overdosed on toxic drugs.

Addictions specialist Dr. Monty Ghosh says it's too early to be a trend, but it is a good sign — one he's surprised by.

"Things are moving in the right direction. So hopefully this continues to be the case, even though we had a disastrous 2023," said Ghosh.

Read full story on CBC
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