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Lethbridge May EMS drug responses highest on record

Lethbridge EMS responded to the highest number of drug-related events last month than in any other May since 2018.

Last week, the Government of Alberta updated the data on the Alberta substance use surveillance system, which it uses to communicate information about substance use in the province.

The new data includes EMS responses to opioid-related events up to the end of May 2022. Hospitalization and SCS usage data haven’t been updated beyond December 2022, and deaths haven’t been updated since January.

My last story on EMS in Lethbridge had EMS data up to April. Since then, Lethbridge EMS responded to 43 opioid-related events, which is higher than what we saw the previous month.

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This is the highest number of calls for May, compared to the previous 5 years.

201838
201916
202020
202128
202212
202343

Here it is in graph form:

Last month’s numbers broke the previous second highest spot of 38, set in 2018 (the same year the supervised consumption site opened), and was over 3 times as high as the record low of 12, set in 2022.

If these number continue into June, we could see 125 drug responses in the second quarter of 2023, the highest number for any second quarter since 2018.

201820192020202120222023
Q17255328098126
Q211448846945125
Q3775411213668
Q47739739796
Q2 2023 is only a projection, as we have data for only two months of that quarter.

As well, during the first 12 months after the SCS closed down in August 2020, Lethbridge saw 358 opioid-related events that EMS responded to. This is the highest number of such events during the same period over the last 4 years.

Sep 2018–Aug 2019236
Sep 2019–Aug 2020269
Sep 2020–Aug 2021358
Sep 2021–Aug 2022308

In the first 12 months after the SCS was closed due to the UCP government cancelling funding, Lethbridge EMS responded to an average of 29.8 drug responses a month, up from 22.3 during the same 12-month period the previous year. They also increased from 5.1 reponses per week, on average, to 6.9 per week.

During the second year after the SCS was shut down, we saw 308 EMS responses to drug events.

While that’s less than the 358 we saw between September 2020 and August 2021, it’s the second highest number seen during the same period over the last 4 years.

And while we’re still only 9 months into the third year since the Alberta government effectively shut down the SCS, the monthly and weekly averages of EMS drug responses are on the rise.

2018–192019–202020–212021–222022–23
Avg/month19.722.428.126.836.11
Avg/week4.55.26.56.28.3

And that makes sense, since we’re already have seen the second highest number of EMS drug responses between September and August, despite the fact that we still have 3 more months in this reporting period.

Sep 2018–Aug 2019236
Sep 2019–Aug 2020269
Sep 2020–Aug 2021337
Sep 2021–Aug 2022322
Sep 2022–Aug 2023325
Note: the last line is still missing data from June, July, and August of 2023.

As well, May’s numbers were tied for the third highest the city has seen in any month since November of 2021.

As you can see, the number of drug responses that the Lethbridge EMS were responding to began to decline in the latter half of 2021, but then the trend reversed last summer, with increases nearly every month since June of last year.

Here’s a look at all the months on record.

201820192020202120222023
Jan142510144044
Feb39178234147
Mar191314431733
Apr411215141239
May381620281243
Jun3520492721
Jul3528565223
Aug2410424924
Sep1816143521
Oct2810153229
Nov2816384339
Dec2113202228

May 2023 was also tied with March and November 2021 for having the 5th highest number of EMS drug responses in any month since January 2018. It was tied for 4th highest since the SCS was shut down in August 2020.

One thing to keep in mind when reading these statistics is that just because EMS are responding to these drug events doesn’t necessarily mean these were the only drug events.

For example, if more people are carrying naloxone on them or more groups outfitted with naloxone (such as SAGE Clan) are patrolling public areas where people are using drugs, they may attend to overdoses and see such success that EMS is never called.

So, the actual number of drug events occuring in the city last month could have been higher.

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By Kim Siever

Kim Siever is an independent queer journalist based in Lethbridge, Alberta. He writes daily news articles, focusing on politics and labour.

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