Opioid use taking toll in Ontario with hundreds of overdose deaths: report
TORONTO — The use of opioids varies dramatically across Ontario, but overall the potent and addictive medications are responsible for hundreds of overdose deaths each year, researchers say.
A study by scientists at the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network found 638 people died in 2013 from opioid overdoses — a rate of about one death for every 20,000 residents in the province. The report, released Thursday, found 13 per cent of those fatal overdoses were suicides.
In the five years ending in 2013, the most recent year for which statistics are available in Ontario, there were 2,879 deaths from opioid overdoses, the study found.
“I think it highlights that this issue is not going away,” said lead author Tara Gomes, a researcher at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto. “We continue to see high rates of fatal and non-fatal overdoses and a large degree of opioid prescribing across the province.”


