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Studies on B.C. safer supply emerge, finding different answers to different questions

One recent study found the program was associated with a reduced risk of death from overdose and other causes among opioid-using participants, while another concluded the strategy was associated with a significant increase in opioid overdose hospitalizations across the community.

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Studies on B.C. safer supply emerge, finding different answers to different questions

A woman injects hydromorphone at the Providence Health Care Crosstown Clinic in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, B.C., on Wednesday April 6, 2016.


VANCOUVER - Peer-reviewed research is emerging about the possible impacts of British Columbia’s safer supply program, which provides prescription alternatives to toxic illicit drugs, with two studies in international medical journals casting the strategy in a different light.

One found the program was associated with a reduced risk of death from overdose and other causes among opioid-using participants, while the other concluded the strategy was associated with a significant increase in opioid overdose hospitalizations across the community.

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