Medicine Hat News

Toronto lays out opioid measures after emergency meeting on spike in deaths

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Toronto is speeding up the opening of three supervised injection sites and asking local police to consider having some officers carry the opioid overdose antidote naloxone as the city responds to a spike in suspected opioid-related deaths.

The measures were among several laid out Thursday after the city’s mayor held an emergency meeting with first responders, public health officials and some city councillor­s.

“These are unimaginab­le tragedies and, make no mistake, an overdose death is a preventabl­e death,” Mayor John Tory said in a statement. “Today, I asked our first responders to ensure we are doing everything as fast as possible to implement Toronto’s overdose action plan.”

Many Canadian cities have grappled with drug overdose deaths in recent months.

The most notable is likely Vancouver, which has recorded 25 deaths and nearly 600 overdose calls in June alone. The opioid crisis claimed 935 lives in the British Columbia last year.

In Toronto, the issue has been thrust under the spotlight recently after the overdose deaths of four people between Thursday and Sunday last week. Two young women also died in an apartment in the city’s west end Tuesday in what paramedics called suspected overdoses.

While the exact cause of the incidents was not confirmed in most cases, police said they believed fentanyl may have played a role. The potent drug can be fatal, even in trace amounts that may have been laced into other drugs.

Toronto released an overdose action plan in March. On Thursday, it announced ways in which it was ramping up its efforts.

Three supervised injection sites coming to central Toronto, which had been expected sometime in the fall, will open sooner, the city said. The sites allow people to use illicit drugs under the supervisio­n of a medical profession­al.

The city has also asked Toronto police to consider the targeted distributi­on of naloxone to some officers. A spokesman for the force said police chief Mark Saunders would be meeting with the mayor shortly to discuss the request.

Toronto further plans to step up training for paramedics and firefighte­rs in areas of the city flagged as having the highest number of calls for service, and will also increase public education on overdoses.

The city is also mulling emergency bulk purchases of naloxone as part of its efforts for quicker distributi­on to necessary personnel.

Coun. Joe Cressy, chair of the Toronto Drug Strategy Implementa­tion Panel, said the city will provide naloxone kits to all firefighte­rs by the end of the September, adding that paramedics already have access to the antidote.

City officials are also in talks with Health Canada about providing drug testing services so users can determine if drugs are laced with other substances such as fentanyl, he said.

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