in 2012, ontario experienced 585 opioid overdose deaths, a rate of 4.4 deaths per 100,000 of population – and a decade later, the province saw
2,531 opioid deaths,
or a rate of 16.8 deaths per 100,000.
that’s a staggering increase and yet, 2022 was down from a high of 2,858 deaths the year before.
these are the numbers and comparisons you don’t hear about from the media and their carefully chosen experts. instead, we are told that we need more so-called safe injection sites and greater access to so-called safe supply or people will die.
anyone opposed to that idea is portrayed as rejecting science and lacking compassion.
here’s a cold fact for you that should make everyone question whether safe injection sites really are the compassionate answer to the drug problem. since ontario got it’s first injection site in 2017, the number of deaths from opioid overdoses has more than doubled from 1,270 to 2,531.
the total numbers for 2023 have not been released by public health ontario, but the quarterly numbers indicate we will likely see a rise again in deaths.
hydromorphone pills sit on a table thursday, january 26, 2017 in belleville, ont.
luke hendry
/
postmedia
it’s the same story if we look at local numbers.
toronto had 309 overdose deaths in 2017, then an all-time high, but in 2022 the city recorded 510 deaths. in ottawa, the figures went from 82 deaths in 2018, the year they got their first injection site, to 172 in 2022 – a 110% increase.