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Reader's Digest Canada
|June 2018
Vancouver community advocate Sarah Blyth is helping to curb drug-related deaths

THE VENDOR STALLS of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside Street Market are piled high with ’80s action-movie DVDs, parasols, handknitted booties and Justice League comics—a trove of treasures for all types. The sprawling social enterprise gives sellers, many of whom are living on low incomes, a chance to earn extra money. It buzzes with the chatter and convivial chaos typical of such places, but in 2016, when the city’s opioid issue became a fullblown crisis, that flurry of activity turned ominous.
At the time, community activist Sarah Blyth was working as a manager at the market, which is located in an area that is popular with drug users. She started witnessing more and more overdoses—sometimes up to five a day. (According to a B.C. Coroners Service report, fentanyldetected deaths increased in Vancouver from 32 in 2015 to 280 in 2017 due to the potent opioid narcotic contaminating the drug supply.)
This story is from the June 2018 edition of Reader's Digest Canada.
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