Risks of contaminated Vancouver drug supply heightened during pandemic: Study
published on May 11, 2022
More than a third of people who use drugs in Vancouver, Canada reported a decline in the quality of drugs during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new study published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence. The decline in drug quality was associated with an increased risk of experiencing a non-fatal overdose. The research findings support calls for a safer, regulated supply for people who use drugs to prevent further deaths from an increasingly toxic and unpredictable supply.
Data for the study came from three ongoing cohorts of people who use drugs in Vancouver: those from the At-Risk Youth Study, the Vancouver Injection Drug Users Study and the AIDS Care Cohort to Evaluate Exposure to Survival Services. Researchers from Simon Fraser University, British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, the University of British Columbia, Curtin University and the Burnet Institute Behaviours and Health Risks Program in Melbourne, Australia carried out the study—together with co-authors who included people with lived and living substance use experience.
Safe supply needed
Researchers note that while harm reduction measures such as supervised consumption sites and naloxone distribution programs are vital to saving lives, they don’t fully address the increased risk and challenges resulting from an increasingly toxic drug supply.
Their findings underscore the need to implement low-barrier and accessible models for a regulated and safer supply of drugs to prevent further deaths.
“Our study findings re-enforce what the community of people who use drugs has been saying since the pandemic was declared – the drug supply is increasingly toxic, dangerous, and unpredictable, and people need safer options if we’re going to help keep them alive,” says study senior author Kora DeBeck, an SFU associate professor in SFU’s School of Public Policy. DeBeck leads the At-Risk Youth Study and researches drug-related harms prevention.
Evidence of decline in drug quality during the pandemic
Researchers surveyed 738 people who use drugs, via phone or videoconference, between July and November 2020. They found that 272 people or 36.9 per cent of those surveyed reported a decline in drug quality.
Those who reported drug quality declines were also significantly more likely to report experiencing a recent non-fatal overdose, frequent injection drug use and stimulant use.
Individuals who regularly use stimulants were significantly more likely to report a decline in the quality of drugs—a concerning finding given that data from the B.C. Coroners Service finds cocaine was present in 46.2 per cent of deaths from 2019 to 2021. Researchers suggest a safer supply is needed for those who use stimulants as well as opioids.
“The perception is that it’s the toxic drug supply of opioids that is killing people, but contaminated stimulants are also killing a high number of stimulant users,” says Kali Sedgemore, study co-author and a youth harm reduction and peer navigator/supervisor with Molson Overdose Prevention Site and Mobile Unit in Vancouver. “Many youths rely on stimulants as a survival tactic to stay safe, alert and protect themselves on the streets. Harm reduction and other services would help to support these realities for young people.”
Contamination of B.C.’s unregulated drug supply with benzodiazepines is another concern and heightens overdose risk. Researchers say benzodiazepines are appearing more frequently in community drug checking.
“If anyone is still wondering why overdoses are continuing at rates higher than ever, they just need to look at the drug supply,” says Dean Wilson, study co-author and peer engagement lead with the BC Centre on Substance Use. “The supply first became more unpredictable in 2016. What happened? People died. In 2020, the supply got worse, and more dangerous. What happened? More people died. The drug supply is killing people. Regulate drugs and get people access to a safer supply, where they know what they’re using.”
Part of a global problem
The decline in drug quality during the pandemic is a global issue. Research conducted by the International Network of People Who Use Drugs found that 50 to 70 per cent of respondents globally reported that the quality of drugs declined during the pandemic.
The decline in quality is thought to have been impacted by border closures and travel bans— measures to control the spread of COVID-19—which also restricted the drug supply chain. These measures left an opening for an increased flow of fentanyl and other substances more easily trafficked by mail, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Shortages in methamphetamine production and trafficking and heroin shortages during the pandemic may have also let to altering or substituting with synthetic opioids such as fentanyl.
For interviews, contact:
Kora DeBeck, Associate Professor, School of Public Policy, SFU
[email protected]
Kevin Hollett, Communications, BC Centre on Substance Use
[email protected]
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Originally published by Simon Fraser University