‘Opioid problem’ in southwestern Ontario community: public health unit
A southwestern Ontario community is dealing with what its public health officials call an “opioid problem” that has left them scrambling to figure out the extent of the issue and what can be done to solve it.
The rate of opioid-linked deaths in the Windsor, Ont., area was more than double the provincial rate in 2015, according to a recently released report from the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit. The county’s rate of opioid-related deaths per 100,000 members of the population was 10.7 that year, compared to 5.1 for the province, the report said.
The report shows 43 opioid-related deaths were recorded in the county in 2015, compared to 32 the year earlier. The 2015 figures are the most recent ones available.
“The opioid problem here worries me,” said Dr. Wajid Ahmed, associate medical officer of health with the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit. “It’s about time that we as a community need to come together to try to do something locally.”


