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A memorial wall dedicated to overdose victims in Vancouver's Downtown on April 10, 2017.Rafal Gerszak/The Globe and Mail

More than four people a day on average died in British Columbia in May from illicit drugs, a death toll the coroner's service says should serve as a warning to people who are not drug-dependent to avoid experimentation.

The service says provisional data show 129 persons died in May, down slightly from 136 who died in April.

It says until November 2016, there had never been as many as 100 drug deaths in the province for a single month, but in every month since then the number of deaths has exceeded 110.

The highest number of deaths came in December, when 159 died.

The service says the powerful painkiller fentanyl was detected in 72 per cent of people who died in the first four months of this year, up from 60 per cent last year.

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe said people should not casually use illicit drugs because of the risk.

"The number of deaths shows that the risks remain extreme," she said in a news release on Friday. "The drug supply is unsafe, and casual and occasional users are at high risk of overdose due to their opioid naivete."

The highest numbers of deaths were in Vancouver, Surrey and Victoria.

Last year, 967 people died in B.C. from illicit drug overdoses. In the first five months of this year, 640 have died.

The prime minister says all levels of government must continue to push for 'lasting solutions' to the rising opioid epidemic in Canada. Justin Trudeau addressed the Federation of Canadian Municipalities Friday in Ottawa.

The Canadian Press

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