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The changing role of substances: trends, characteristics of individuals and prior healthcare utilization among individuals with accidental substance-related toxicity deaths in Ontario Canada

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posted on 2025-06-27, 11:46 authored by Shaleesa Ledlie, Alice HoltonAlice Holton, Pamela Leece, Bisola Hamzat, Joanna Yang, Gillian Kolla, Nikki Bozinoff, Rob Boyd, Mike Franklyn, Ashley Smoke, Paul Newcombe, Tara Gomes

Objective: To investigate trends and the circumstances surrounding fatal substance-related toxicities directly attributed to alcohol, stimulants, benzodiazepines or opioids and combinations of substances in Ontario, Canada.

Methods: We conducted a population-based cross-sectional study of all accidental substance-related toxicity deaths in Ontario, Canada from January 1, 2018 to June 30, 2022. We reported monthly rates of substance-related toxicity deaths and investigated the combination of substances most commonly involved in deaths. Demographic characteristics, location of incident, and prior healthcare encounters for non-fatal toxicities and substance use disorders were examined.

Results: Overall, 10,022 accidental substance-related toxicity deaths occurred, with the annual number of deaths nearly doubling between the first and last 12 months of the study period (N = 1,570-2,702). Opioids were directly involved in the majority of deaths (84.1%; N = 8,431), followed by stimulants (60.9%; N = 6,108), alcohol (13.4%; N = 1,346) and benzodiazepines (7.8%; N = 782). In total, 56.9% (N = 5,698) of deaths involved combinations of substances. Approximately one-fifth of individuals were treated in a hospital setting for a substance-related toxicity in the past year, with the majority being opioid-related (17.4%; N = 1,748). Finally, 60.9% (N = 6,098) of people had a substance use disorder diagnosis at time of death.

Conclusions: Our study shows not only the enormous loss of life from substance-related toxicities but also the growing importance of combinations of substances in these deaths. A large proportion of people had previously interacted within an hospital setting for prior substance-related toxicity events or related to a substance use disorder, representing important missed intervention points in providing appropriate care.

Funding

Public Health Agency of Canada, Substance-Related Harms Division

Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Grants #153070 and #178163)

Network for Improving Health Systems Trainee Award

Banting postdoctoral fellowship from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Tier 2 Canada Research Chair

History

Data Availability Statement

The datasets from this study is held securely in coded form at ICES. While data sharing agreements prohibit ICES from publicly releasing a minimal deidentified dataset, access can be granted to those who meet pre-specified criteria for confidential access through the Data & Analytics Service (DAS). More information on how to access this data is available at www.ices.on.ca/DAS.

Comments

The original article is available at https://journals.plos.org/

Published Citation

Ledlie S, et al. The changing role of substances: trends, characteristics of individuals and prior healthcare utilization among individuals with accidental substance-related toxicity deaths in Ontario Canada. PLoS One. 2025;20(5):e0324732.

Publication Date

23 May 2025

PubMed ID

40408455

Department/Unit

  • School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)