B.C. paramedics responded to nearly 100 drug overdoses per day in 2021, data shows
Last year was the deadliest year for drug overdoses in B.C.'s history, and newly released data from B.C. Emergency Health Services shows it was also the busiest for paramedics responding to the overdose crisis, by a wide margin.
BCEHS responded to 35,525 overdoses in 2021, an increase of 31 per cent compared to the previous year, and nearly triple the 12,263 it responded to in 2015.
The province declared the overdose crisis a public health emergency in 2016, and the number of overdoses paramedics have responded to has risen every year since, according to BCEHS figures.
"Every day in B.C., close to 100 people overdose," BCEHS said in a news release Wednesday announcing the latest numbers.
"One of the areas to see a dramatic increase in overdose call volumes is Surrey, with almost a 50 per cent increase over the previous year," the agency said.
Surrey saw a total of 3,674 overdose calls in 2021, which is more than 10 per cent of all overdose calls in the province.
The largest share of overdose calls was in Vancouver, however, where paramedics responded to 9,993 overdoses, a 23-per-cent increase from 2020.
Victoria had the third-highest number of overdose calls for the year, with 1,952, up 24 per cent from the previous year.
While those three cities combined to account for more than 40 per cent of overdose calls in the province in 2021, BCEHS says every part of the province was affected.
Each of the province's five health authorities saw thousands of overdoses in 2021, with calls breaking down as follows:
- Vancouver Coastal Health: 11,204 calls (up 24 per cent from last year)
- Fraser Health: 10,573 (up 45 per cent)
- Island Health: 5,917 (up 32 per cent)
- Interior Health: 5,417 (up 29 per cent)
- Northern Health: 2,414 (up 16 per cent)
"Almost every community in B.C. had more overdose patients in 2021 than the previous year," BCEHS said.
Some of the largest percentage increases were seen in Courtenay (up 127 per cent to 467 overdose calls), Cranbrook (up 84 per cent to 191) and Mission (up 82 per cent to 397), according to BCEHS.
Two communities that bucked the trend and saw decreases in overdose calls were Fort St. John (down 22 per cent to 97 overdoses) and Quesnel (down 25 per cent to 157).
More data on 2021 overdose calls can be found on the BCEHS website.
According to the BC Coroners Service, there were 1,782 overdose deaths in the province through the end of October. That's the most ever recorded in a calendar year, and two months of data from 2021 are still yet to be reported.
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