
Opioid related deaths triple in Lethbridge from 2016
LETHBRIDGE – Since Alberta Health began releasing quarterly reports in 2016 on opioid-related deaths across the province, the number of those who have died in Lethbridge alone from apparent accidental opioid poisoning deaths has more than tripled.
According to the Alberta Opioid Response Report Q4, eight people died in 2016, 15 people died in 2017, and that number rose to 25 last year.
The report also shows that 746 people died across the province in 2018, and on average, two people die every day in the province from apparent accident opioid poisoning. 88 per cent of those died, did so in the province’s largest centres, including Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer, Medicine Hat and Lethbridge. Since Jan. 1, 2016, 1,842 people have died.
Combined with numbers from Medicine Hat, there were a total of 37 deaths in southern Alberta. 47 died in Red Deer alone, and 23 in Grande Prairie.