Situation 'heartbreaking' as 168 more Albertans die of drug poisoning: physician - Action News
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Situation 'heartbreaking' as 168 more Albertans die of drug poisoning: physician

Since the start of the year, 1,169 Albertans have died of drug poisoning deaths, including 168 in the month of July, according to new data from the province's substance use surveillance system.

Province has already set several grim records this year

A man wearing a toque and a mask stands outside a building where there is a bin outside that reads
A man waits to enter the Safeworks supervised consumption site at the Sheldon M. Chumir Health Centre in Calgary on Aug. 26. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Since the start of the year, 1,169 Albertans have died of drug poisoning deaths, including 168 in the month of July, according to new data from the province's substance use surveillance system.

The number of deaths recorded over thefirst seven months of the same period last year was 1,021, making this year's figure a 14.5 per cent increase.

For those working at street level, including Calgary family physician Bonnie Larson, such numbers were to be expected.

"The numbers are hard, difficult, heartbreaking, but not surprising, because I am out there on the frontline in Calgary anyway, and seeing firsthand the impact of all of it. It's a complicated landscape," Larson said.


There were 57 drug poisoning deaths in Calgary in July, compared to 58 in Edmonton. So far this year, Calgary has seen the most deaths across the province, with 419 in the first seven months of the yearcompared to Edmonton's 376.

The province has already set several grim records amid the crisis.Alberta poisoning deaths in April due to opioidshit 194, the highest number since theprovince started collecting datain 2016.

The surveillance system is updated on a monthly basisas data is received from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, according to the province. Data is usually received about eight weeks after the end of the month.


What drug testing and wastewater testing is revealing right now is that there's a higher amount of drugs such as carfentanil in the supply than ever before, according to Dr. Monty Ghosh,an addictions specialist who practises in both Edmonton and Calgary.

"The drug supply is incredibly toxic, and it keeps shifting week by week. It's very hard to predict what's happening with the drug supply. And so I'm not surprised by these numbers," Ghoshsaid.

"If you look at some of the predictions that Health Canada is making in terms of the modelling these numbers are just going to continue to rise."

Dr. Monty Gosh is posing for the camera, wearing a dark sweater over a white shirt and tie with his arms crossed over his chest.
Dr. Monty Ghosh, an addictions specialist who practises in both Edmonton and Calgary, says it will be very difficult to control the ongoing overdose crisis until the toxic drug supply is controlled. (S. Monty Ghosh)

The presence of contaminants in the drug supply means that a co-ordinated, multi-pronged response must be deployed, in Ghosh's view.

"We really need to have a system in place where we can alert people to the toxic drug supply. We need to have a system in place where people are aware of the substances that they're using," Ghosh said.

"We also need to limit the toxic drug supply as a whole, if we can."

In a statement, a spokesperson for Mental Health and Addiction Minister Dan Williams highlighted the province's commitment to its recovery-oriented model of care.

"Since 2019, more than 10,000 treatment spaces have been added and are helping free Albertans from the deadly disease of addiction, with more on the way through the opening of 11 recovery communities throughout the province," Hunter Baril wrote.

"These facilities, along with any other publicly funded treatment centre, offer addiction treatment at no cost. Financial barriers should never hold someone back from accessing the life-saving treatment they need."

CBC News requested more information onhow many people are currently waiting on beds, how many people accessed treatment last yearand how many people completed treatment in 2022.

Barilsaidthe government is still working with operatorsto implement an online tool, called My Recovery Plan,that it anticipates will provide anaccurate depiction of province-wide data.

"Once a comprehensive data set is available it will be published publicly," he wrote."As this is the first year of implementation, we do not have data from previous years, and look forward to showing outcomes in the future."

With files from Colleen Underwood