Montreal Gazette

Fentanyl ‘stickers’ suspected in overdose

Colourful ‘tabs’ found in pocket of Calgary victim

- SHARON KIRKEY

They look like what children would put in a scrapbook, but the colourful stickers showing up in Alberta may be delivering deadly doses of fentanyl.

Paramedics in that province are warning their colleagues of a possible new ingestion route for fentanyl after harmless looking stickers were found in the pockets of a suspected overdose victim in Calgary.

The person’s discoloure­d saliva matched the colours of the stickers, which haven’t yet been tested to confirm the presence of fentanyl, or any other illicit drug.

However, police in Ontario and Manitoba have seized fentanyl “blotters” — paper tablets similar to LSD “tabs.”

Blotters can be made from raw crystals of fentanyl that are crushed to talc and put into a solution that’s used to soak or dip sheets of paper.

“The crystals can then dry and be bound in paper, which will then become absorbed when they’re applied to a wet surface or shoved under your tongue,” said Tim Lehman, a duty supervisor at BC Emergency Health Services and a member of a provincial first responders fentanyl task force.

“Once you soak it into a sheet, it’s uniformly soaked per square millimetre, the whole premise being that then you have a dose in each sheet, you let it dry and then you can cut out a dose,” Lehman said. “Is it exact? No,” he said. “Who knows what else is in it.”

In medicine, fentanyl usually comes in slow-release prescripti­on transderma­l patches. Its abuse by people looking to get high has soared. Of 655 fentanyl-related deaths across Canada between 2009 and 2014, most were the result of valid prescripti­ons that were abused or diverted to the street.

The “stickers” found in Calgary are not prescripti­on-grade fentanyl patches. Rather, they look like something “a three-year-old would put into a colouring book,” said Dr. Mark Yarema, an emergency physician and medical director of Alberta Health Service’s poison and drug informatio­n service.

Yarema said he is aware of at least two possible overdose cases in Calgary involving the stickers. If you use the drugs, “you’re playing Russian roulette and you really have no idea what you’re getting into,” he said.

Fentanyl has strength 100 times that of morphine.

Across the country addicts are overdosing and dying at unpreceden­ted rates. In Vancouver, more people have fatally overdosed so far this year than in all of 2016, with 232 deaths recorded since the start of the year compared with 231 fatalities for last year, many involving fentanyl.

In Ontario, fentanyl-related deaths in all age groups in the province increased 548 per cent between 2006 and 2015.

Like other opioid drugs, fentanyl latches onto the receptors in the brain that control breathing. Breathing can slow down or come to a stop, leading to cardiac arrest.

Vancouver Police and B.C. Emergency Health Services said they have not seen fentanyl-laced “stickers” or blotters in B.C.

 ?? ALBERTA PARAMEDIC ASSOCIATIO­N FACEBOOK ?? Suspected fentanyl “stickers” have been found in Calgary. Health officials are concerned about the stickers, but say lab tests still need to be completed to confirm.
ALBERTA PARAMEDIC ASSOCIATIO­N FACEBOOK Suspected fentanyl “stickers” have been found in Calgary. Health officials are concerned about the stickers, but say lab tests still need to be completed to confirm.

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