Yukon’s opioid fatality rate now highest in Canada, overtaking B.C.: coroner
Global News
Yukon chief coroner Heather Jones says opioid fatalities now represent over 20 per cent of all deaths investigated by the service between January and Nov. 26 this year.
Yukon’s Coroner’s Service says the territory’s opioid overdose rate per capita is now the highest in Canada with a reported 48.4 deaths per 100,000 people.
Yukon chief coroner Heather Jones says opioid fatalities now represent over 20 per cent of all deaths investigated by the service between January and Nov. 26 this year.
Jones says in a news release the deaths must be seen as a medical crisis.
Since the onset of COVID-19 in March 2020, Jones says 32 drug overdose deaths occurred in Yukon and all but one were related to fentanyl, a powerful opioid responsible for many Canadian overdoses.
Since the overdose crisis began in 2016, Jones says British Columbia has consistently led the country with the highest rates of opioid deaths, but recent data indicates Yukon has overtaken those figures.
Jones says most people are dying alone in their homes and she warns that naloxone is becoming less effective against the “increasing toxicity of the drugs.”
The service says it doesn’t collect race-specific information, but Kwanlin Dun First Nation Chief Doris Bill says she believes First Nations people are “disproportionately affected.”
“It’s no longer a crisis. It’s an emergency,” she said in an interview. “We need more resources and we need the federal government to step in to help us.”