Men, alone and at home, dominate drug overdose deaths - Action News
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British Columbia

Men, alone and at home, dominate drug overdose deaths

The vast majority of fatal overdose victims in B.C. are men, and theyre much more likely to die after using drugs at home and alone, according to a new coroner's report.

Study of 872 deaths in 2016 and 2017 shows vast majority of victims were male

The vast majority of fatal overdose victims in B.C. are men, and they're much more likely to die after using drugs at home and alone, according to a new coroner's report. (Jeff McIntosh)

The vast majority of fatal overdose victims in B.C. are men,and they're much more likely to die after using drugs at home and alone, according to a new coroner's report.

The review of 872 illicit drug overdose deaths in 2016 and 2017 found that 81 per cent of victims were male, and two-thirds overdosed alone, inside a private residence.

"We continue to urge those using substances to plan to take them in the company of someone who can provide help: administering naloxone and calling 911 for assistance," chief coroner Lisa Lapointe said in a news release.

"Illicit drugs continue to be the source of more than three deaths per day in B.C."

Illicit drug users are far more likely to overdose at home than any other location. (BC Coroners Service)

The report puts the lie to any stereotypes suggesting B.C.'s overdose crisis mainly affects people living on the streets of Vancouver's impoverished Downtown Eastside.

Only nine per cent of those who died were homeless, and 13 per cent lived in social housing or single-room occupancy hotels. Just under half were employed at the time of death.

The report identifies several other common threads that weave together many recent overdose deaths in B.C.

That includes mental illness and pain more than half of those who died had reported a mental health diagnosis or showed evidence of a disorder, and about the same percentage reported pain-related issues.

Among employed victims, people who worked in the trades or transport were most likely to die of an overdose. (BC Coroners Service)

It also includes employment sector. About a quarter of all deaths involved people who worked in the trades or transportation.

Most overdose victims were regular or chronic users of illicit drugs, and two-thirds had never been married.

Fentanyl continues to be a major factor in B.C.'s ongoing crisis; and was detected in connection with more than three quarters of all deaths.

A chart from the BC Coroners Service breaks down overdose deaths by age and sex. (BC Coroners Service)