First Nations women overrepresented among B.C. toxic drug deaths: doctor
VICTORIA — The top doctor at British Columbia’s First Nations Health Authority says Indigenous people, especially women, are dying from toxic drugs at disproportionately high rates as the overdose crisis continues “unabated,” nearly seven years after the province first declared a public health emergency.
Dr. Nel Wieman, the acting chief medical officer, says illicit drugs are killing First Nations people at five times the rate of B.C.’s general population.
She says that figure rose to 8.8 per cent for First Nations women, specifically, compared with non-Indigenous women in the province in the first half of 2022.
That number contrasts with the overall toll for the province, which shows 79 per cent of those who died from toxic drugs last year were male.