Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jul 2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 2000 Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Lindsay Kines, The Vancouver Sun BOOZE BIGGER KILLER THAN DRUGS IN VANCOUVER Heroin and cocaine overdoses grab the headlines, but drinking kills far more people in Vancouver every year than illicit drugs, according to a report slated for release later this summer. A draft copy of the study obtained by The Vancouver Sun shows there were an average of 297 alcohol-related deaths annually in Vancouver from 1991 to 1998. Over the same time period, an average of 147 deaths each year were listed as drug-induced. "Despite the attention given to illicit drugs due to their association with overdose deaths and blood-borne infections, alcohol continues to be related to a higher number of deaths in Vancouver," Dr. Mark McLean of the Vancouver Richmond Health board writes in his report, Vancouver Drug Epidemiology and Drug Crime Statistics 2000. The report was prepared for the Canadian Community Epidemiology Network on Drug Use, a clearing house for information on substance abuse in Canada. McLean said in an interview Monday that the impact of alcohol may be even greater than his report indicates. He tracked only those deaths directly related to alcohol in which people died from such things as alcohol poisoning or liver damage from long-term drinking. The numbers do not include traffic fatalities, homicides and suicides - -- deaths in which alcohol often figures prominently. Nor do the statistics reflect the role alcohol plays in many drug overdoses either by impairing an addict's judgment or by mixing with drugs to create deadly cocktails. "It may be that alcohol is an important component of our drug overdose death rate that we need to pay more attention to," McLean said. He noted that police efforts to move drug use out of pubs and bars may help reduce the overdose death rate. "If we can separate drug use from alcohol use we may end up with less mortality," he said. John Turvey of the Downtown Eastside Youth Activities Society said McLean's report highlights a tragic problem that often gets overlooked. "One of the things we haven't done is really look at the role of alcohol in our community," Turvey said. "And alcohol is clearly the most deadly drug in the Downtown Eastside and in the city of Vancouver." McLean's report shows the community health area encompassing the Downtown Eastside has the highest alcohol-related death rate at an average of 21 men and nine women per 10,000. The health area encompassing Vancouver's West End ranks a distant second, with a death rate of seven men and two women per 10,000. "Alcohol has this incredible role and if we would just address that in the community we could reduce overdose deaths," Turvey said. He called on officials to crack down on people and establishments that over serve alcohol to drug users, and educate addicts about the dangers posed by mixing drugs and alcohol. "People really don't understand that alcohol has this incredible facilitating role -- not just as a drug, but as a drug that has a capacity to incredibly impair people," he said. McLean said alcohol poses such a serious threat because so many more people drink than do drugs. "Whereas illicit drugs are used within a narrow spectrum of our population, alcohol is used much more widely," he said. "And because it's a legal substance, because it's used much more widely, we do end up with people suffering the effects of alcohol in many ways and often it being the primary cause of their death." A year ago, the provincial government acknowledged alcohol's deadly role by pulling rice wine off corner store shelves and permitting sales only in liquor stores. A committee whose members included representatives of city police, aboriginal agencies and Chinese restaurateurs concluded that rice wine sales to "unintended consumers" - -- usually native Indians on the Downtown Eastside -- had resulted in an epidemic of ill health and death. The B.C. coroner's office recorded at least 39 deaths in 1998 linked to rice alcohol -- almost double the number recorded in 1997. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek