Dialogue Volume 10 Issue 4 2014 | Page 60

opioids The public health, societal burden of opioid overdose I n just 19 years, the rate of opioidrelated deaths increased by a staggering 242 percent in the province, an audience of Ontario methadone prescribers was told. Tara Gomes, a scientist at ICES and a Principal Investigator of the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network told the nearly 300 physicians at the CPSO-organized conference that between 1991 and 2010 the number of annual deaths from opioids rose from 127 to 550. Among adults aged 25 to 34, one of every eight deaths is related to opioids “This means that we have at least one or two people dying of an opioid overdose every day in Ontario,” she said. In the study, published in the journal Addiction earlier this year, researchers reviewed 5,935 opioid-related deaths in Ontario 60 Dialogue Issue 4, 2014 between 1991 and 2010 and found that approximately one in every 170 deaths in the province may be related to opioid overdose. Furthermore, this burden is heavily weighted towards younger people. Among adults aged 25 to 34, one of every eight deaths is related to opioids. Gomes, who is also a scientist at the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael’s Hospital, said that as a leading cause of premature death, opioid overdoses result in 21,927 years of potential life lost annually, exceeding that due to alcohol use disorders, pneumonia, HIV/AIDS and influenza. “The extraordinary toll of premature mortality related to opioids reflects, in part, the disproportionate number of these deaths among younger individuals, and highlights the public health and societal burden of opioid overdose,” added Gomes. Gomes was the keynote speaker on a day that addressed a number of issues relating to addiction, and methadone specifically. photo: D.W. Dorken Researcher Tara Gomes speaks to methadone prescribers about the increase in opioid-related deaths in Ontario.