The Current

ENCORE | 'I was dead for 10 minutes': Vancouver's opioid overdose crisis

The CBC's Natalie Clancy looks at the raw reality of what is now considered to be Canada's opioid crisis.

Alexandra LaViolette describes overdose

8 years ago
Duration 0:31
"I had to go in an ambulance and I honestly don't even remember doing the drugs."

Read Story Transcript

On Dec. 13, 2016, nine people died of drug overdoses in Vancouver. Those nine deaths in a single night are part of an ongoing trend.

Over the past year, Vancouver-area hospitals have treated more than 6,000 cases of drug overdoses. Over 70 per cent of those cases are dealt with in the ER at St. Paul's Hospital downtown.

CBC reporter Natalie Clancy spent a shift in St. Paul's emergency department with the doctors and nurses on the front lines of the crisis at St Paul's hospital.

"I remember being told that I was dead for 10 minutes," says patient Alexandra LaViolette, 24, in Clancy's documentary, Fentanyl Ground Zero: A night in Canada's busiest Overdose ER.​

"I wasn't breathing for about seven to 10 minutes," she says. "I honestly don't remember even doing the drugs."

Nurse Tanya Campbell tries to figure out whether her overdose patient consumed cocaine, heroin or fentanyl, or all of the above, at St. Paul's hospital in Vancouver. (Fred Gagnon/CBC)

"Apparently, I overdosed," LaViolette tells Clancy. It was her first overdose. 

When paramedics picked LaViolette up at her friend's apartment, she was found outside on the road.

"She didn't wake up until she got in the ambulance," says Tanya Campbell, the emergency department's nurse leader.

"As you see her now she is awake, she's alert, but that doesn't mean she won't go back down," Campbell explains.

Campbell says the number of overdoses she's witnessed is overwhelming and the patients appear to be taking stronger drugs.

For the full story by CBC's Natalie Clancy on Vancouver's opioid crisis, read here.

Listen to the full documentary near the top of this web post.

This documentary was produced by CBC's Natalie Clancy and edited by CBC's Alison Cook.