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Research casts doubt on toxic drug crisis in construction: BCCSA

Evan Saunders
Research casts doubt on toxic drug crisis in construction: BCCSA

According to a recent study, the British Columbia 麻豆传媒高清ion Safety Association (BCCSA) claims the toxic drug crisis in the construction industry is not as bad as previously thought.

鈥淭he initial findings of the study cast doubt on the apparent crisis that the researchers were asked to investigate,鈥 said Mike McKenna, executive director of BCCSA, at an industry event unveiling the report on March 7.

The report, put together by Dr. Paul Farnan, Dr. Carson McPherson, Dr. Paul Sobey, Dr. Julian Somers and Akm Moniruzzaman from Simon Fraser University, worked with more than 650 informants in the sector to determine the prevalence and type of substance use.

Individuals interviewed for the study came from a range of locations, trades and age groups.

The study was generally focused around use of substances such as alcohol and illicit drugs at the workplace, with a secondary view being worker health in general and how it is impacted by substance use.

鈥淭he blueprint project found that cannabis and alcohol account for the vast majority of safety and health-related risks faced by workers in the B.C. construction sector,鈥 reads the draft final report.

Resources over-allocated to fighting the opioid problem take away from helping more serious problems, such as alcohol and cannabis abuse, it reads.

 

What we found is, as my colleagues have stated, cannabis and alcohol accounted for the vast majority of safety and health related risks

鈥 Dr. Paul Sobey
Simon Fraser University

 

McKenna said the report 鈥渃hanged the narrative鈥 around toxic drug use and construction.

鈥淭he narrative of substantial overlap between poisonings and construction appears to be a disservice to the vast majority of those who are at risk of poisoning, and diverts attention from more robustly demonstrated safety and health-related risks in the construction sector,鈥 reads the report.

Of 639 survey respondents, 107 said they had used opioid medication, ecstasy/MDMA, heroin/fentanyl or methamphetamines in the past 12 months. Approximately 270 responded they had used cannabis in the same period.

Regarding substance use at or before work, 69 people responded they had used cannabis and 75 that they had used either opioid medication, cocaine, meth, heroin, or MDMA, according to the BCCSA鈥檚 report.

The researchers took aim at the narrative that opioid use is a serious problem in the construction industry.

鈥淲hat we found is, as my colleagues have stated, cannabis and alcohol accounted for the vast majority of safety and health related risks faced by the B.C. construction industry,鈥 said Sobey.

He criticized media reports and government reporting on the severity of the toxic drug crisis.

鈥淚n the media, what’s reported is a strong association between trades and construction work with drug poisoning. This is contrary to what the research has told us. Government action has tended to reflect this position,鈥 he said.

鈥淢y opinion is that narrative and approach may be a disservice.鈥

The studied roughly 6,000 toxic drug deaths between August 1, 2017 and July 31, 2021 in B.C.

The review states that 35 per cent of the deceased were employed when they died and more than half of them worked in trades, transport or as equipment operators.

The listed illicit drug toxicity as the number four cause of death in 2022 across the entire population. Kidney disease and liver disease came in at numbers 15 and 10, respectively.

Somers cited a statistic stating only 27 per cent of people who had died from toxic drug overdose were employed at their time of death.

鈥淪o, while it’s possible to speculate, there isn’t any direct evidence implicating construction and opioids, certainly not from our results,鈥 he said.

鈥淭he overwhelming risk for poisoning is among people who are unemployed鈥eople (using) multiple substances鈥nd who also were likely to have been diagnosed with mental illnesses.鈥

He said getting more people to work in construction would actually be part of the solution to the toxic drug crisis and should be a government and not a sector priority.

鈥淚t doesn’t make as much sense from our data or from other people’s data to frame it as something that the sector would take on as a priority.鈥

The BCCSA report concluded alcohol was the most dangerous substance to worker health.

鈥淭he research clearly shows us that alcohol is causing fourfold minimum times the deaths that opioids are causing. Alcohol is number one,鈥 Sobey said.

The B.C. Coroners notes that ethyl alcohol was the fifth most common substance found in overdose deaths behind fentanyl, cocaine, meth and other opioids in descending order.

 

Dr. Julian Somers with Simon Fraser University addresses a crowd of B.C. construction industry stakeholders on March 7 regarding the BCCSA鈥檚 new report on substance use, 麻豆传媒高清ion Safety & Substance Use: Blueprint for Action in BC.
EVAN SAUNDERS 鈥 Dr. Julian Somers with Simon Fraser University addresses a crowd of B.C. construction industry stakeholders on March 7 regarding the BCCSA鈥檚 new report on substance use, 麻豆传媒高清ion Safety & Substance Use: Blueprint for Action in BC.

 

鈥淎lcohol in comparison to other sectors is a relatively greater source of problems among people linked to construction,鈥 said Somers.

More than 80 per cent of people interviewed for the report said they had consumed alcohol in the past 12 months.

鈥淗eavy alcohol use among full-time construction workers (16.5 per cent) was nearly twice the overall rate,鈥 reads the report.

The report makes several recommendations for how the sector can tackle substance use in the industry, such as the BCCSA developing a fact sheet on substance use; partnering with trades, associations and government to increase supports; promoting the benefits of 鈥減rofessionalization and benefits of certification鈥; shifting away from a 鈥渄rinking culture鈥; and facilitating the 鈥渟afe鈥 disclosure and open discussion of substance use-related problems.

Of particular importance was increasing at-work supports for employees.

鈥淭here’s a separate analysis of people who self-identify as being in recovery. About 40 per cent of them report that their employer was not a source of support, either in initiating their recovery or in maintaining their recovery,鈥 said Somers.

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Recent Comments (2 comments)

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Bernie Noseworthy Image Bernie Noseworthy

I don’t think the issue is hard drugs, I have seen it since cannabis has been legalized it is the go too for many. Problem is alcohol is easily detected but cannabis is much harder. Many trades people go to work high because of their habit, it is their normal. 麻豆传媒高清ion is a competitive business and employers require not social workers so therefore don’t employ the same services of such. There should be mandatory testing in place by the safety officer on site to determine people from coming to work impaired. Your study side stepping issue.

Bobbysteven lepp Image Bobbysteven lepp

i have been in the operating engineers and the hiway / pipeline for 42 years
mostly in greater vancouver. i鈥檓 also owner of Ex-cell pipe inc and it bothers me a great deal being even slightly labeled of the accusations here.
The industry is very strict and i meet a lot of guys and gals in the sites. i鈥檓 in safety observation full time and very odd time i have proof of drug and alcohol abuse. i work with many of the major players and i鈥檓 not naive to this area.
So even this study is not accurate.
Considering the challenges we face,, it takes clear thinking and highly respected JSA 鈥榮 and reports , & work plans collaborated effectively!! Our lives are trusted to coworker鈥檚 skills and protocols. 98% of us are professionals

Prudence for the /23 season ahead

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