CBC Edition

Maker of B.C. overdose prevention device says it helped save 15 lives in 1 year

- Moira Wyton

The company behind a first-of-its-kind overdose prevention device says 15 people in British Columbia are alive today after Life‐ guardLite called for help when they couldn't.

The LifeguardL­ite device alerts building staff if a resi‐ dent doesn't disable an alarm after using drugs, and can even call 911 directly if the alarm if help is needed.

The device - now installed in more than 1,000 units in supportive housing and shel‐ ters across the Lower Main‐ land and Victoria - has been used over 2,000 times, called 911 for help 308 times, and has helped save 15 lives in B.C. since last April, according to data Lifeguard Digital Health shared with CBC News.

That's an average of more than one life saved per month, amid a toxic drug crisis killing an average of nearly seven per day in B.C., according to the province.

WATCH | New device hopes to prevent toxic drug deaths:

One of the patients who used LifeguardL­ite is a sup‐ portive housing resident who pushed the button when they woke up with severe chest pains and had difficulty breathing, said Jamie Sinclair, Lifeguard's manager of sup‐ portive housing solutions.

"It turned out they actual‐ ly were in cardiac arrest, so paramedics were dispatched immediatel­y and they were able to be taken to the hospi‐ tal," she said in a Wednesday interview.

Due to privacy reasons, CBC News was not able to speak to the person.

Lifeguard says the data it reports is verified through B.C. Emergency Health Ser‐ vices (BCEHS). A BCEHS spokespers­on acknowledg­ed a CBC News request to con‐ firm the figures on March 11 but did not provide a re‐ sponse before publicatio­n.

Catherine Roome, interim CEO of Atira Women's Re‐ source Society, says Life‐ guardLite devices have been installed in 151 rooms in the single-room occupancy (SRO) Hotel Canada in downtown Vancouver.

She says it has been used more than 200 times and has alerted staff and 911 to 14 emergency medical situa‐ tions.

"So about seven per cent of the time that it's been acti‐ vated now for any reason health, safety or wellness it's actually saved some‐ body's life," Roome said in a Thursday interview.

The device is also smoke detector and can send an alert when the temperatur­e inside a room is too high, she added.

Roome said Atira is apply‐ ing for funding from B.C. Housing to install the devices - which cost around $350 each - in more of its build‐ ings.

Sinclair says LifeguardL­ite has been installed in build‐ ings in Ontario, and New York City's health depart‐ ment said it has plans to pilot the devices.

Lifeguard's phone-based app, which launched in 2020, has helped save approxi‐ mately 85 people who had overdosed alone, according to Sinclair. Both technologi­es have been developed with funding from B.C.'s provincial government and Health Canada.

'We're worth saving'

Sinclair says the results are encouragin­g and show the device helps keep residents safe even if they aren't using drugs.

"We had a young lady who was being threatened in her room and was fearful for her safety, so she was able to

start the device, and she got help right away," she said.

"So of course the over‐ dose piece, yes, but it's being used in all different ways."

Some experts and drug user advocates, including the Vancouver Area Network of

Drug Users, have said the de‐ vice, while helpful, is a BandAid solution that doesn't ad‐ dress the toxicity of the drug supply or lack of supports for mental health and sub‐ stance-use issues.

LifeguardL­ite is just one way to prevent people from dying until "there's enough detox beds and there's enough treatment beds that can deal with concurrent dis‐ orders," said Sinclair, who used to run an SRO and is in recovery herself.

"I went to treatment more than once, and statistica­lly it takes us more than once to get it," said Sinclair. "We're not just a statistic and we're worth saving."

More than 14,000 people in B.C. have died from toxic drugs since a public health emergency was declared in April 2016, and around a quarter of them died inside shelters, SROs, hotels or sup‐ portive housing, according to the B.C. Coroners Service.

Sixty-one per cent of those who died since the be‐ ginning of the COVID-19 pan‐ demic were using alone, the service found in 2022.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada