
B.C.'s chief coroner looks at new approach to tackling the overdose crisis
Nine years after the start of a public health emergency that has killed more than 16,000 people, B.C.'s new chief coroner is taking on the crisis in a new way — an approach he says is, perhaps, a little less political than his predecessor.
Dr. Jatinder Baidwan, who goes by Taj, says he plans to take less of an advocacy role compared to Lisa Lapointe, who often pointed sharp criticism at the government when she disagreed with its approach on preventing drug deaths.
"As the chief coroner, it's my responsibility not to advocate for any particular group out there. But to advocate for all British Columbians … for those who have died," said Baidwain, who started his five-year term in August.
Baidwan doesn't profess to have all the answers on how to stop overdose deaths and the cycle of addiction.
But he is concerned that harm reduction advocates and those who advocate for abstinence-based treatment and recovery are so ensconced in their stance that they won't talk to one another.
"How do we, as the coroners service, get people with all ideas on how to fix this issue around a table and get them to talk to one another?"
Baidwan joined the B.C. Coroners Service in 2016 as a chief medical officer.
His 20 years working as a medical officer in the British Army has taken him all over the world— Iraq, Bosnia and parts of Africa. Baidwan also worked in the Household Cavalry, guarding the Queen.
He, his wife of 28 years and their two youngest children — twins who are about to enter university — relocated from England to B.C. in 2007, and Baidwan worked as an emergency room doctor in Victoria and throughout rural B.C. Their oldest son remained in the U.K., where he works as an ER doctor.
Baidwan says he wants to be more strategic in the way his agency puts out information on toxic drug deaths and also highlight other preventable deaths like those of unhoused people and deaths from intimate partner violence.
Speaking from his office in Victoria overlooking the Inner Harbour, Baidwan says he and his team are moving to deeper analysis of trends in overdose deaths, instead of fixating on monthly overdose numbers to tell the story. He's concerned the public becomes desensitized to the deaths and begins to tune them out.
"I do worry that flooding the media with information sometimes isn't the best way of doing it," he said. "Any death, one death from this scourge is one death too many."
Some harm reduction advocates initially feared this meant Baidwan was moving his focus away from opioid deaths.
Leslie McBain, who has pushed for a safer supply of regulated opioids ever since her son, Jordan, died of an overdose in 2014, says after a meeting with Baidwan this month, she's convinced that's not the case.
"I'm very impressed by this man, he's a straight shooter," said McBain, of Moms Stop the Harm. "He absolutely knows on a deep level about the opioid crisis. He may not give his deep opinions but, as all coroners do, he will give recommendations on ameliorating the situation."
"We are not stopping the attention we've given in the past," Baidwan said. "In fact, we're increasing the amount of time we're thinking about drug deaths."
For example, Baidwan says he's trying to enhance partnerships with the B.C. Centre for Disease Control so some of their data analysts and public health researchers can improve the analysis done on overdose deaths.
Different approach from his predecessor
It's a different approach compared to that of his predecessor, Lapointe, who led the coroner service for 13 years.
Lapointe, a lawyer, pushed for decriminalization of hard drugs and for a safer supply of regulated opioids to separate people from deadly street drugs.
Compassion is key to solving toxic drug crisis, B.C.'s retiring chief coroner says
1 year ago
Duration 8:15
Toxic drugs have killed nearly 14,000 people in British Columbia since 2016, making drug deaths a dominant issue during Lisa Lapointe's tenure as chief coroner. She talks to The National's Ian Hanomansing about advocating for a 'safer supply' and why compassion would go a long way in solving the drug crisis.
But the public — and eventually the NDP government — were not always on side with her recommendations, particularly as open drug use in playgrounds, parks and city sidewalks led to calls to walk back the decriminalization experiment.
Lapointe had also called for safer supply drugs to be provided without a prescription, a recommendation swiftly rejected by the government. Health Minister Josie Osborne announced last month a stricter approach, requiring people who use prescription opioids to take them under the supervision of a pharmacist.
Lapointe retired in February, vocal about her frustration at how polarized and political the debate over drug policy had become. She told CBC's The Current she left the job angry at the "lackadaisical" response to the toxic drugs crisis.
Baidwain says he will let the data around overdose deaths speak for itself.
B.C.'s low autopsy rates
She died in her bedroom in Port Coquitlam in the summer of 2022 from an overdose. The coroner's report concluded the teen's death was caused by cocaine and MDMA use, although there were other drugs in her system, including hydromorphone — a medication prescribed under B.C.'s safer supply program.
Sword was convinced the hydromorphone in her system was downplayed as a cause of death.
While Baidwan couldn't speak specifically to Kamilah's case, he said an autopsy would not have made a difference in understanding the cause of death.
However, Baidwan says autopsies are incredibly invasive, and often, the coroners service can get the answers they're looking for without one.
Families frustrated by B.C.'s low autopsy rate
1 year ago
Duration 6:30
"In the world of CSI, we think an autopsy will give us all the answers. Sadly, it doesn't."
B.C. has one of the lowest autopsy rates in the country. A rate that has declined steadily from 22 per cent in 1991 to 3.2 per cent in 2022, according to Statistics Canada.
However, Baidwan says those figures are misleading because they do not include autopsies performed in the health system — when someone dies in hospital, for example — which makes up about 10 per cent of deaths.
Baidwan is advocating for more coroners to be hired, as the number of deaths each year in B.C. grows due to the aging and growing population.
"We've continually hired more coroners over the last few years. And the government has been supportive in allowing us to hire the right number of people."
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Vancouver Sun
6 days ago
- Vancouver Sun
Family says Coquitlam man could have died from extreme cellulitis after neglect from CLBC
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CLBC contracts out responsibility for the day program that Hudson goes to in Coquitlam to the Community Integrated Services Society, and Boyd said the provincial Crown corporation should have been aware of both their mother's hospitalizations and the health problems Hudson was developing. The day program provides activities as well as volunteering and employment opportunities for people with disabilities, five days a week. Instead, Boyd said it took weeks of calling, texting and emailing his old case worker, his new caseworker, and the CLBC office to get a response. 'My brother is in care of someone who's been hospitalized three times in four months. To me, that would be a red flag to say, 'Listen, what's going on there where this caregiver has been hospitalized,'' Boyd told Postmedia. 'CLBC, their job is to make sure the safety of my brother and adults at risk due to disabilities.' In order to better care for Hudson, Boyd said he, his wife and their children have moved from Mission back to the family home in Coquitlam and are in the process of setting up a home share arrangement with CLBC, allowing them to be responsible for his care. The concerns raised by Boyd are the latest in a long line of concerns about the Crown agency, which has a budget of $1.8 billion and oversees the care of 29,000 British Columbians with a range of disabilities, such as autism and Down syndrome, that require daily care. Last week, the provincial government launched a review of the agency's home-sharing program, which provides money to people who agree to become caregivers for people with disabilities unable to live on their own. The review comes after January coroner's inquest into the death of 54 year-old Florence Girard, who had Down syndrome, at her home share in 2018. It found Girard had starved to death due to neglect by her caregiver, Astrid Dahl. The B.C. 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Global News
06-06-2025
- Global News
BC Conservatives question $1M contract for B.C. drug and mental illness adviser
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The Province
05-06-2025
- The Province
New report finds wait times in B.C. emergency rooms continue to climb
In B.C., the shortest ER wait time was at Vancouver's Mount St. Joseph's Hospital, while the worst was at Abbotsford Regional Hospital Eagle Ridge Hospital emergency room entrance. Photo by Ian Lindsay / Vancouver Sun British Columbians are waiting longer to get care in emergency rooms and the situation is the worst it's been in the last five years, according to a new national report looking at emergency room wait times across the country. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles by top sports columnists Patrick Johnston, Ben Kuzma, J.J. Abrams and others. Plus, Canucks Report, Sports and Headline News newsletters and events. Unlimited online access to The Province and 15 news sites with one account. The Province ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles and comics, including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles by top sports columnists Patrick Johnston, Ben Kuzma, J.J. Abrams and others. Plus, Canucks Report, Sports and Headline News newsletters and events. Unlimited online access to The Province and 15 news sites with one account. The Province ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on. Daily puzzles and comics, including the New York Times Crossword. Support local journalism. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors The report by the Montreal Economic Institute found that the median length of stay in a B.C. emergency room — calculated from the time a patient registers to when they are discharged or are admitted to the hospital — was four hours and 13 minutes in 2024, up from just over three hours in 2019. 'Throughout the years, B.C. has remained somewhere in the middle of the pack, never the worst, never the best,' said report author and economist Emmanuelle B. Faubert on Wednesday. 'But while they're not doing the most poorly out of the provinces, there's still improvement that can be done.' The median wait time indicates that 50 per cent of patients waits more and 50 per cent waits less. The longest waiting times in the country were in Quebec, where ER patients' median wait was nearly 5 1/2 hours and shortest in Newfoundland and Labrador, where the median wait time was two hours and 45 minutes. Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia were not included due to lack of submitted data. Essential reading for hockey fans who eat, sleep, Canucks, repeat. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Median wait times in the emergency room in 2024/2025, by province Photo by Montreal Economic Institute Reports of long waiting times at emergency rooms in B.C. are not new. A patient visiting Eagle Ridge Hospital in Port Moody shared a photo of a handwritten sign posted at the ER early Tuesday morning that said the wait time to see a doctor was 12 hours. Fraser Health said the sign was not made or posted by the health authority, although it acknowledged the emergency department saw 'higher-than-normal patient volumes' and 'unexpected staffing challenges.' A 'significant' number of patients did not require urgent care, and many of them had to wait longer to get care, it said in a statement. This isn't the first time rogue signs have appeared at Eagle Ridge, which has consistently reported some of the longest ER waiting times among Metro Vancouver hospitals. It placed 20th out of 29 emergency rooms in B.C. with a median wait time of four hours and 24 minutes, according to the report from the Montreal think-tank. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Late last year, photos of signs saying the hospital's ER was closed due to overcapacity circulated on social media. The sign was false Fraser Health said at the time. It was unclear who wrote the note, but it appeared to be from frustrated staff who urged the public to contact Port Coquitlam MLA Mike Farnworth to 'help us advocate' to keep the ER open 'so that we can do our jobs and attend to every patient requiring emergency care in a timely fashion.' In 2023, doctors at Eagle Ridge, along with colleagues at Royal Columbian Hospital, penned an open letter sounding the alarm over long waiting times, overcrowding and patient safety at the two hospitals' emergency departments due to a shortage of ER doctors and nurses. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. In B.C., the shortest ER waiting time was at Providence Health's Mount Saint Joseph Hospital in Vancouver (a median wait of two hours and 54 minutes), said the report. Fraser Health's Fraser Canyon Hospital in Hope (three hours) had the next shortest waits followed by Vancouver Coastal's UBC Health Sciences Centre (three hours and six minutes). The worst performer was Abbotsford Regional Hospital and Cancer Centre (six hours and 36 minutes), followed by Island Health's Royal Jubilee Hospital (six hours and 18 minutes) and Vancouver General Hospital (five hours and 18 minutes). The report chalked up longer waiting times partly to a lack of access to primary care and lack of options for people with minor emergencies. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. It recommended Canada adopt clinics similar to ones operating in France called immediate medical care centres to fill in what it called the missing middle of emergency care to treat low priority cases, such as fractures or infections. Faubert said the French clinics are similar to B.C.'s urgent care centres but are privately run, which Faubert argued would face less bureaucratic red tape to get set up and operating and have more flexibility in terms of scheduling and staffing. 'Also, having clinics run and operated by government means it can be slower to spread across the province and the country,' she said. 'There's limitations when you have control that is very centralized.' At an unrelated news conference on Tuesday, B.C. Health Minister Josie Osborne said the long waiting times at B.C. emergency departments speak to the larger context of the global shortage of health care workers. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. She said that's why the provincial government has been working to build up its primary care system, establish urgent care clinics, fast-tracking credentials of U.S.-trained doctors and U.S.-registered nurses, and ramping up recruitment efforts to attract U.S.-based health care workers to come work in B.C. chchan@ Read More