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Fentanyl: No One is Immune Guest: Kevin deBruyckere
Manage episode 508763434 series 2363524
Fentanyl: No One is Immune
Guest: Kevin deBruyckere, former head of federal policing in British Columbia
By Stuart McNish
“In 2013, in my role as Head of Federal Policing in British Columbia, I started to see an increase in drug-related deaths attributed to a powder form of fentanyl being delivered by mail,” says Kevin deBruyckere. “On May 23rd 2014, it hit home for my family – my 22-year-old son lost his life and our family became a victim of the fentanyl epidemic.”
Over the next decade, more than 16,000 people have lost their lives due to overdoses in British Columbia. Vancouver is at the epicentre of this epidemic. “Unless there is a significant reframing of response to the drug crisis, we can’t beat it. It’s not a law enforcement challenge or issue only – it’s much larger than that,” says deBruyckere.
“This is a public health issue; it’s a housing issue; it’s an educational issue; it’s a prevention issue,” says deBruychkere. The costs to take on the drug epidemic are significant. The costs of not having a coordinated long-term strategy are much larger. “People are dying, families are being destroyed, and all of society is paying a price,” says deBruyckere.
We invited Kevin deBruyckere to join us for a Conversation That Matters about fentanyl and the devastating impact it is having.
You can see the interview here https://www.conversationsthatmatter.ca/
Learn More about our guests career at careersthatmatter.ca
101 episodes
Manage episode 508763434 series 2363524
Fentanyl: No One is Immune
Guest: Kevin deBruyckere, former head of federal policing in British Columbia
By Stuart McNish
“In 2013, in my role as Head of Federal Policing in British Columbia, I started to see an increase in drug-related deaths attributed to a powder form of fentanyl being delivered by mail,” says Kevin deBruyckere. “On May 23rd 2014, it hit home for my family – my 22-year-old son lost his life and our family became a victim of the fentanyl epidemic.”
Over the next decade, more than 16,000 people have lost their lives due to overdoses in British Columbia. Vancouver is at the epicentre of this epidemic. “Unless there is a significant reframing of response to the drug crisis, we can’t beat it. It’s not a law enforcement challenge or issue only – it’s much larger than that,” says deBruyckere.
“This is a public health issue; it’s a housing issue; it’s an educational issue; it’s a prevention issue,” says deBruychkere. The costs to take on the drug epidemic are significant. The costs of not having a coordinated long-term strategy are much larger. “People are dying, families are being destroyed, and all of society is paying a price,” says deBruyckere.
We invited Kevin deBruyckere to join us for a Conversation That Matters about fentanyl and the devastating impact it is having.
You can see the interview here https://www.conversationsthatmatter.ca/
Learn More about our guests career at careersthatmatter.ca
101 episodes
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