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Overdose deaths spike in May, setting new B.C. record for the month, says chief coroner

Of the 195 toxic drug deaths reported in B.C. in May, 38 were in the Island Health region, with 13 in Greater Victoria.
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Lisa Lapointe speaks during a press conference in the press gallery at the Legislature in Victoria, Monday, Nov. 1, 2021. The British Columbia chief coroner says the province is on pace to lose another record number of people to toxic drugs this year.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito

The British Columbia chief coroner says the province is on pace to lose another record number of people to toxic drugs this year.

There were at least 195 deaths from overdoses in May, the highest number ever recorded in the calendar month and a 20 per cent increase over the number of deaths in April.

Of those, 38 were within the Island Health Authority, including 13 in Greater Victoria.

Sixty-seven toxic drug deaths were recorded in Greater Victoria from January to May, compared with 71 in the first five months of 2021 and 167 in all of last year. Nanaimo has had 26 overdose deaths so far — just over half of last year’s total.

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe said in a statement the illicit drug supply in B.C. is volatile and inconsistent, and expedited toxicology testing since July 2020 shows that 91 per cent of submitted samples have detected fentanyl or its analogues.

In at least 44 per cent of the cases, benzodiazepine was detected, which the coroner says doesn’t respond to naloxone and makes reversing an overdose very difficult.

At least 940 people died from toxic drugs in B.C. between January and May, which is a record number for the start of a calendar year.

Mental Health and Addictions Minister Sheila Malcolmson said the numbers are “devastating” and the province is working to build and fund a system to deliver treatment and recovery options across B.C.