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Support, Not Stigma: Honouring Lives Lost to Drug Poisoning in Our Community

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More than 2,200 Ontarians died from drug poisoning last year. It’s important that we recognize the pain behind these numbers. These losses were parents, siblings, friends, and neighbours – members of our community.

One of the biggest barriers to meaningful change is stigma.

Stigma isolates people. It can silence families. It prevents honest conversations about substance use and discourages people from carrying naloxone, accessing harm reduction services, or reaching out for help. It paints drug poisoning as a moral failing or something that only affects people who are unhoused or visibly struggling. That narrative is not only harmful – its inaccurate.

The fact is, unregulated substance use is a reality in our community. The increasingly toxic drug supply poses a risk to everyone – not just those who use substances regularly. Many of these tragedies involve people who use drugs occasionally or recreationally, often unaware that what they’re taking contains fentanyl or other highly toxic substances.

Here in our region, 79% of opioid-related deaths occur in private residences – not in public spaces, but behind closed doors. These numbers challenge the common misconceptions about who is affected and remind us that our response must be rooted in honesty and compassion, not stigma or blame.

Additionally, nearly one-third of Ontarians who died from drug toxicity had no known history of substance use disorder. This issue is not confined to any one demographic – it touches every corner of our community, every socioeconomic group, and every age bracket.

Each year, as part of Drug Poisoning Awareness Day, we collaborate with community members and peers most impacted to design t-shirts with community-driven messages. This year’s message remains clear and urgent: Support, Not Stigma. Truly addressing this crisis requires a public health response rooted in care, evidence, and public health response. That means:

On August 21st in Mount Forest, and August 28th in Guelph, community members will come together for Drug Poisoning Awareness Day — a moment to honour those we’ve lost, stand with those who are grieving, and call for a more compassionate, evidence-based response.

At the heart of this day is a simple but urgent message: Support, Not Stigma. Everyone deserves safety. Everyone deserves support.

Drug Poisoning Awareness Day T-shirts

T-shirt messages are an important part of Drug Poisoning Awareness Day (also known as International Overdose Awareness Day) in Guelph Wellington. Each year, a new message is chosen by community members to recognize the impacts of drug toxicity that we continue to see in our community.  Please wear this year’s T-shirt “Support Not Stigma” proudly and often, including at our annual Drug Poisoning Awareness Day events. Home | Wellington Guelph Drug Strategy Store