Opioid overdoses claimed more than 3,200 lives in first nine months of 2018
OTTAWA — The Public Health Agency of Canada has released new data showing that 3,286 Canadians died after apparent opioid-related overdoses between January and September last year.
The data also indicates that fentanyl and other fentanyl-related substances continue to be a “major driver” of Canada’s opioid crisis, with 73 per cent of accidental apparent opioid-related deaths in the nine-month span involving the potent painkilling drugs.
In comparison, the agency says there were 3,017 apparent opioid-related deaths in 2016 and 4,034 in 2017.
If the rate of deaths in first nine months of 2018 continued for the full year, the total would have been nearly 4,400.