Manitoba begins 2024 with record high 56 drug-related deaths in a single month

Manitoba’s drug crisis continues to wreak havoc despite efforts to curb deadly overdoses, with preliminary numbers revealing January saw 56 deaths — a record number for a single month.

That follows a previous high of 54 drug-related deaths in December 2023. That year started with 39 in January and so far 445 deaths have been recorded, the second-most in any year. The year-end numbers are still being finalized 

And now there is a new worry with the emergence of the designer drug, desalkylgidazepam, which was involved in 18 of those January deaths, according to data from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.

DAG is resistant to the anti-opioid drug naloxone because it is a benzodiazepine (central nervous system depressant), which means it will be more difficult to rescue users overdosing on the streets, the examiner’s office said in an email.

A person wears a black hooded sweatshirt, backwards ball cap and glasses. They stand on the sidewalk of a downtown street.
Davey Cole says Sunshine House’s mobile harm reduction site is on the lookout for a new designer drug that has been cited in a number of deaths in January. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

“Those numbers aren’t just numbers. That’s two deaths a day, almost. That’s people,” Davey Cole, director of Sunshine House’s mobile overdose prevention site, told CBC Information Radio guest host Emily Brass on Wednesday.

“You look in the city and you see you can just look out into the crowd and you can see people who have been affected by this drug toxicity crisis. It’s called that for a reason.”

Fentanyl continues to be the leading cause of deaths, with 36 in January, the chief medical officer’s data shows.

“While it is hard on the heart to work in this … you can see that things are working and we can see that the community there really wants to take care of each other and that really sustains the work, you know,” Cole said, referring to the success of the mobile site, known as MOPS, which is entering its second year.

Looking at its first full year, a report released last month listed 7,086 times when drugs were consumed at the converted RV, which offers users a safe place where they can also be supervised by staff trained in overdose response.

Those visits included 20 overdoses but no deaths.

The site also distributes harm-reduction supplies, including clean needles and pipes, and tests the chemical composition of drugs.

So far, there has been no appearance of DAG, but staff are on the lookout, Cole said.

“I’ve been hearing about it from other cities [but] we haven’t specifically seen anything we’ve tested on site. When we hear things, we start to put out little whispers and be like, ‘Hey, if you hear anything let us know.’ And folks will come and test their supply.”

Cole believes part of the reason for the increase in drug-related deaths is due to the impact on supply by police busts. As dealers are jailed and supply is impacted, users look outside of their trusted sources. That means newer and more risky mixes filling the void.

A chart shows numbers and months
Data from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner shows the breakdown of drug-related deaths in 2022 and 2023. The preliminary year-end totals are 467 and 445, respectively. (Office of the Chief Medical Examiner)

What’s really needed is a permanent supervised consumption site with a safe supply, Cole said.

“We really need to start looking at the drug toxicity crisis as an actual crisis and start thinking of what are other ways to address that,” Cole said.

“People are going to do drugs, they know the drugs they want to do and they should be able to have the autonomy to choose that and not just some random drug that is the new designer drug.”

The absence of drug-related deaths at the MOPS site proves the model works, Cole said.

The provincial government’s most recent budget included $2.5 million for a supervised consumption site that would also help connect users to support services. However, consultations need to happen first and an exact location in Winnipeg has not been chosen.

“We need to get moving. Manitoba has historically been pretty behind in harm-reduction stuff,” Cole said.

“We’re on our way and that’s exciting but … people’s lives are at stake.”

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