Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Before I ask questions, I wanted to provide some opening remarks, given that this is a study that I initiated with a motion passed by committee earlier this year.
Mr. Chair, we have eight meetings, I believe, most of which will be taking place in the new year, in 2024.
We know that 2023 will be another tragic year for Canadians. In 2022, we saw 7,328 deaths. The current death rate is estimated to be 21 Canadians dying daily. Isn't it shocking that we can actually predict with more or less confidence that 600 or more Canadians will die of an opioid or mixed drug overdose between now and the end of the year? Despite this having been recognized as an emergency seven years ago, the death toll continues to be the same or to rise.
When I was CMOH in the Yukon, we witnessed the first fentanyl death occurring in April 2016, the same month that British Columbia's chief public health officer at the time, Dr. Kendall, declared a public health emergency due to a shocking rise in deaths in that province. That's continued to increase since.
Since those earlier days of the epidemic, governments have responded. Many wonderful things have happened. Naloxone kits, for instance, are everywhere in our territory and widespread around the country. We have had the first supervised consumption site in Yukon, north of 60, including one of the first sites in the country with an inhalation room. We've scaled up efforts and treatment in clinical opioid substitution, in harm reduction, and to some degree in prevention.
The Yukon declared a substance use emergency in January 2022, and recently revised its substance use health emergency strategy, just a few months ago, based on the four-pillar approach that we all know so well.
Yet the deaths go on. Lives and families are torn apart with overdose fatalities or injuries. We've done so much, yet the scale of our response has not yet matched the need.
As we take on this study, I plead with all committee members around the table to have one aim—one single aim in mind. I know I'll be thinking of my own two teenagers and their friends, and what more we can do to protect them. Let this be about saving Canadians' lives. Let's not make this about personal attacks or takedowns, or scoring political points. Let's take a hard look at what is working and what is not, and if something is not working, then let us examine why, learn and adapt.
To my colleague Dr. Ellis, “experiment” is really a word for taking a new approach. To your question about a “null hypothesis”, I think we could answer that our current model is clearly not working, so we need to take new directions.
Let us look at models of innovation and success that have shown promise or have been shown to work, either within our country or elsewhere. Let us be able to come up at the end of this study with urgent, thoughtful, evidence-based, compassionate, bold and intelligent recommendations as to what all of us can do to get this epidemic under control—as individuals, as communities, as governments at all levels.
I know that each one of us cares. Please, for the sake of Canadians, let's work together on this with respect, with humility, with urgency, and with the decency that Canadians expect of us.
I know I have only about two minutes left, but I'd like to bring back my questions.
Thank you all for being here.
Budget 2023 proposes an additional $359 million over five years to support a renewed strategy. Ms. Saxe, I wonder if you could describe some of the directions you intend to take with this renewed funding.
I'd like to save time for Ms. Hurley from the Public Health Agency to comment as well on that same question.