- Available data from January 1st 2015 to December 31st 2021 shows 52,227* people had a drug poisoning. 10,826 people had a fatal drug poisoning, and 41,401 people had a non-fatal drug poisoning event
- 67% of people who experienced drug poisoning event between 2015 and 2021were male
- 46% of persons experienced a drug poisoning between 2015 and 2021 were 19-39 years of age. Persons in this age group comprise 27% of the BC population
*does not include persons who did not access health care services at the time of drug poisoning or drug poisoning events reversed in community.
The BC-ODC is a collection of data on people who had a drug poisoning between January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2021. The BC-ODC includes information on:
- drug poisoning events
- prescription medications
- social assistance programs
- mental health service use
- provincial incarceration history
- healthcare utilization including hospitalizations and visits to emergency departments
Health data is included from 2010 to present, with new BC-ODC data updated annually. By including data over time, we can look at what happens before, during, and after a drug poisoning event. Health Authorities involved in the drug poisoning response can request data access. Data requests are also possible for research and policy purposes.
- Better understand what leads to non-fatal drug poisoning and drug poisoning death
- Adapt and support unregulated drug poisoning emergency response activities
- Identify opportunities for intervention and public health messaging
- Assess the impact of drug poisoning response interventions
- Understand the long-term health outcomes of people who have had a drug poisoning event
Materials produced by the BC-ODC are posted on the Harm Reduction Reports page.
Harm Reduction: Substance Use & Overdose Reports