
A post-pandemic spike in drug deaths continued in N.L. last year. The biggest culprit? Cocaine
On the day he sold his pickup truck, Jeff Bourne looked at the passenger seat and counted all the people who once rode with him that are no longer living.
He stopped after 30.
Bourne, who runs the peer support group U-Turn Addiction Recovery in Carbonear, N.L., has been losing more friends lately than ever before.
"They're not bad people. They're just sick people that's trying to get well."
At least 74 people died from consuming drugs in Newfoundland and Labrador last year, eclipsing 2023's record of 73 deaths.
Of the total number of drug deaths last year, 61 were deemed accidental, nine were suicides and four were undetermined.
The numbers, which were shared with CBC Investigates by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, show cocaine was the deadliest drug in the province, contributing to 34 deaths. Fentanyl was the key factor in 17 deaths, while benzodiazapines were found to be at fault in 14 deaths.
Tammy Bourne — peer support lead at U-Turn — said there was a shift during the COVID-19 pandemic, which is now factoring into the fatalities they're experiencing.
"We've had a lot of people who had a lot of long-term recovery in, and went back out using during the pandemic because of the stress and the isolation," she said. "We've had a lot of deaths of people who've been coming around for a long time. We've had a lot of deaths since the pandemic."
That's backed up by the numbers, which show the number of accidental drug deaths nearly doubled in 2023, coming down only slightly in 2024.
Opioids and stimulants a dangerous mix, says medical examiner
There were more than 550 autopsies in Newfoundland and Labrador last year. Of those, 13 per cent were from drug deaths. The bulk of those were performed by the province's Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Nash Denic.
Some were obvious — people found with drug paraphernalia and signs of long-term drug use, like a road map leading to the cause of death. Others were more complicated, showing only internal hints of drug use later confirmed by toxicology results.
Opioids remain top of mind for harm reduction advocates and grab the majority of attention in the news, but Denic said people should always be cognizant of cocaine's risks.
"Individuals have to know cocaine is still [the] most dangerous drug, and the reason being is that we don't have an antidote," Denic said.
An opioid overdose can be reversed with naloxone, but cocaine cannot.
Fifteen of the 74 total deaths last year involved a stimulant, such as cocaine, and an opioid taken together. Denic said in many of those cases naloxone was administered, but it did not revive the person.
"They may have fentanyl on board, but they also may have cocaine. And the cocaine is going to be the substance that is going to kill the individual, so the Narcan will not help."
Jeff and Tammy Bourne switch into different modes depending on what they're doing on a given day. As people, they have lived experience with addiction and mental illness. As peer support workers, they share those experiences with others to make them feel more like friends, and less like clients.
But, when someone dies, they have to take on a different, almost parental role, to help others get through it without relapsing.
That's taking a toll on the couple as of late.
"We don't really have an amount of time for us to grieve," Jeff Bourne said.
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Style Blueprint
2 days ago
- Style Blueprint
NursesMC is Turning Ninth Graders into Future Nurses
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Winnipeg Free Press
3 days ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Manitoba's regional authorities spent over $35M last year in the ongoing effort to keep hospital workers safe
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'It's often a common occurrence. 'With the multiple socioeconomic barriers and constraints in Thompson… personnel that can actually intervene appropriately, we may see a decrease in the violence that we experience every day.' Only a few days after the Christmas Eve incident, there was another frightening scene. After arriving by ambulance, a patient began hurling insults, racial slurs and threats at emergency department staff while clenching his fists. 'I stood up in front of the patient — I'm only five-foot-one — and I said, 'You are going to leave the facility and when you are ready to be respectful, you can come back,'' the nurse said. 'I'm surprised I didn't get in trouble with my employer; even though we have a zero-tolerance policy it is never enforced. We are almost expected to take the behaviour.' Asagwara said institutional safety officers are on the way for Thompson, but in the meantime, the province is looking at instituting a First Nations Safety Officer program, which will hire and train safety officers from the community to work alongside hospital security. 'Health-care workers should be able to go to work and feel safe and focus on providing the best patient care possible,' the minister said. 'So should patients and visitors.' On William Avenue earlier this week, just outside Winnipeg's downtown core, a security guard clad in a black-and-grey uniform stepped out into the evening sun from HSC's adult emergency department. She scanned the scene from left to right before taking a few steps to peek around each corner of the entrance, something that happens every 15 minutes. The HSC campus employs 42 institutional safety officers. The HSC campus employs 42 institutional safety officers. Check completed, she walked back inside, to a vestibule where her partner sat next to the AI-weapon detector. Similar, but smaller than more-familiar metal detectors used in other venues, the equipment is adorned with Shared Health's logo colours of orange, yellow, teal and green. Just beyond it, a metal-detecting wand sits on a desk with a security log book beside it. Signs at the entrance door warn visitors of the security checkpoint ahead. Hammers, guns and knives are not welcome inside but can be stored in provided amnesty lockers. 'Thank you for keeping this facility safe,' the sign states. Nicole BuffieMultimedia producer Nicole Buffie is a multimedia producer who reports for the Free Press city desk. Born and bred in Winnipeg, Nicole graduated from Red River College's Creative Communications program in 2020 and worked as a reporter throughout Manitoba before joining the Free Press newsroom in 2023. Read more about Nicole. Every piece of reporting Nicole produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Winnipeg Free Press
3 days ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Will you be able to get a COVID-19 shot? Here's what we know so far
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Until now, the U.S. — following guidance from independent experts who advise the CDC — has recommended yearly COVID-19 vaccinations for everyone age 6 months and older. Together, the moves have left health experts, vaccine makers and insurers uncertain about what to advise and what comes next. In Seattle, University of Washington infectious disease expert Dr. John B. Lynch said he recently advised a fellow health care worker who's pregnant to get vaccinated. She agreed, only to be turned away by two pharmacies. 'That's the practical implication,' Lynch told reporters in an Infectious Diseases Society of America briefing. 'We see confusion play out. We see chaos play out. And we see barriers to access.' The conflicting statements are also leaving primary care doctors uncertain of how to advise patients, Lynch added. 'I'm not sure when that confusion is going to be abated,' he said. How can I get a COVID-19 shot for myself or my healthy child? 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The FDA published a list of health conditions it said would qualify, including asthma, cancer, diabetes, obesity and physical inactivity. The CDC has a more extensive list. But, again, it isn't yet known how this will play out. For example, it could be hard for people to prove they're qualified. If they're vaccinated at a drugstore, for instance, the pharmacist wouldn't normally know about underlying health problems or even ask. And Ajay Sethi, an epidemiologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said 'this elephant in the room' is that blocking vaccination to the healthy may mean people who have a risk factor and simply don't know it will miss out. Adding to the confusion was Kennedy's implication that the coronavirus isn't dangerous to pregnant women. COVID-19 complications during pregnancy can include preterm birth as well as serious illness in the mother, and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine said it 'strongly reaffirms' its recommendation for vaccination during pregnancy. Moreover, vaccinating mom can provide spillover protection for the newborn for a few months, until he or she is old enough for their own vaccination, Lynch stressed. ___ Associated Press writer Mike Stobbe contributed to this report. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.