Prøve GULL - Gratis
Overdosing Alone
The Walrus
|November 2018
Why big-city solutions to the opioids crisis dont work in rural communities
Last winter was a brutal one in southwestern Alberta, with snowdrifts taller than trucks and record-breaking cold temperatures. Then, in late February, nature delivered another blow: a howling blizzard, icy roads, and snow that reduced visibility to near zero. At the same time, a particularly lethal shipment of opioids, known on the street as “super beans,” arrived in the area. Officials would later say that they suspected the drugs contained carfentanil, the powerful opioid 5,000 times more potent than heroin. People started overdosing almost immediately.
“It was a perfect storm,” says Esther Tailfeathers, a physician in Stand Off, a small community that’s a forty-minute drive southwest of Lethbridge. Stand Offis the administrative centre of Blood Reserve 148, the largest First Nations reserve in Canada and territory of the Blood Tribe (also known as the Kainai First Nation). About 4,500 members live on-reserve. “The graders and snowplows were working like crazy just to get to the homes where the overdoses had happened,” Tailfeathers says. Paramedics responded to 150 calls that weekend — a substantial feat, considering the community covers an area twice the size of Toronto. In one home, Tailfeathers says, five people overdosed at the same time. Over ten days, thirty people overdosed on the Blood reserve, and nearby Lethbridge reported more than fifty others.
Denne historien er fra November 2018-utgaven av The Walrus.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Walrus
The Walrus
The Lost Epic
An exclusive excerpt from Yann Martel's new novel
10 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
Access Denied
From endless bureaucracy to in-person requirements, universities are shutting out disabled students and staff
16 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
Return to Portapique
My partner murdered 22 people in a shooting rampage. Months later, I went back to our home to show police how I escaped
18 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
Trust Me
Evan Solomon wants Canadians to believe AI is a force for good
22 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
All Office, No Work
Back-to-office mandates were never about productivity. They're about control
10 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
How to Pronounce KING
Souvankham Thammavongsatwo-time winner of the Giller Prizedoesn't mind if you're jealous of her career
13 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
Face Value
What does it mean to really look at another human being?
4 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
MY GUILTY PLEASURE
DURING THE PANDEMIC, everyone wanted a puppy. Then people tired of their dogs. Puppy mills couldn’t find homes for their litters, and those churning out doodles had too many breeding poodles on hand. While searching for my own pandemic puppy, I stumbled upon a poodle rescue group on Facebook. From fostering a few dozen dogs annually, the rescue was, a couple of years into the pandemic, trying to find homes for more than a hundred over the course of a year.
2 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
The Fight Over Canada's Most Valuable Fish
Priced at thousands of dollars per kilogram, baby eels have set off a global frenzy
11 mins
March/April 2026
The Walrus
Leave the Kids Alone
The controversy over free-range parenting
20 mins
March/April 2026
Translate
Change font size

