B.C. First Nations declare state of emergency over opioid crisis and mental health

The Canadian Press Getting a bed at one of British Columbia’s drug detoxification facilities is like winning the lottery, the vice-president on the Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council says. Les Doiron told a news conference Thursday that the province does not have enough facilities dedicated to helping those struggling with addiction amid the opioid crisis that has killed more than 15,000 people since a health emergency was declared in B.C. eight years ago. It has had a devastating affect on Indigenous communities, Doiron said. “Island Health has only two (detox) facilities, one in Nanaimo, one in Victoria,” he said at a news conference in Port Alberni, 85 kilometres west of Nanaimo. “And the First Nations Health Authority has 10 in the entire province. So, what happens is that if you want to…

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