Two of B.C.’s overdose prevention programs have ‘significant deficiencies’: auditor
VICTORIA — Nearly eight years after British Columbia declared a public-health emergency because of escalating overdoses, it still hasn’t set a standard of care for those struggling with addiction, the auditor general says.
“Minimum level standards are at the core of consistent service quality, access and availability across the province and these should be well established by now,” Michael Pickup told a news conference Tuesday.
The B.C. government and public health officer announced the emergency in April 2016 and since then more than 14,000 people have died, most of them from highly potent opioid fentanyl.
Pickup called for a new provincewide evaluation of overdose prevention and supervised consumption services, saying the last one was done in 2021 and the illicit drug supply has changed since then.


