Introduction: In Canada, the COVID-19 pandemic collided with an ongoing overdose crisis driven by a toxic unregulated drug supply. Public health guidance intended to limit transmission of COVID-19 (e.g., social distancing) directly contradicted guidance responding to the ongoing overdose crisis (e.g., never use drugs alone), exacerbating harms among people reliant on the toxic unregulated drug supply. While existing literature characterises many harms associated with consuming unregulated drugs during COVID-19, less is known about the specific impacts on women. We explored the perspectives of women who use unregulated drugs and experienced socio-economic marginalisation on how the COVID-19 environment shaped their overdose risk in British Columbia, Canada.
Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews remotely with 45 participants between May 2020 and September 2021, and analysed the data thematically using a social violence framework.
Results: Participants identified contamination of the unregulated drug supply, particularly with benzodiazepines, as a significant driver of overdose and gendered violence among women who use drugs. 'Social distancing' guidelines (e.g., guest restrictions in supportive housing, reduced capacity in harm reduction services) compounded these risks and resulted in more women using drugs alone, reducing opportunities for timely overdose intervention. In response, participants practiced individualised acts of caregiving (e.g., establishing informal networks that regularly check on each other) to mitigate the risks of overdose and gendered violence for themselves and their community.
Discussion and conclusions: These intersecting health crises perpetuated individualised approaches to addressing the risks of overdose and gendered violence, rather than addressing underlying social and structural drivers of these risks.
Keywords: COVID‐19; drug toxicity; qualitative research; social violence; women who use drugs.
© 2024 The Author(s). Drug and Alcohol Review published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs.