First Nations Health Authority backs harm reduction on B.C. overdose anniversary

By Brenna Owen Deaths from toxic drugs may have dipped, but now is not the time to pull back on life-saving measures, especially given “misinformation” in the public discourse, the top doctor at British Columbia’s First Nations Health Authority said Monday. Dr. Nel Wieman said First Nations continue to be disproportionately represented among the deaths as the province marked the ninth anniversary of the toxic drug crisis being declared a public health emergency on April 14, 2016. Wieman said her team was pushing B.C.’s Health Ministry to help find a tailored approach for First Nations-specific issues with the goal of preventing more people from dying and closing the gap with the non-First Nations population. Wieman presented data showing 427 members of First Nations in B.C. died of a toxic drug…

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