Times Colonist

Illegal fentanyl linked to deaths in Alberta

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EDMONTON — Police and health officials are raising the alarm about an illegal form of a painkillin­g drug linked to more than 100 deaths last year in Alberta.

“In the province of Alberta, fentanyl has contribute­d to or caused more than 100 deaths in 2014 [as indicated by preliminar­y numbers], which is a significan­t increase from six deaths in 2011,” RCMP said Wednesday.

Illegally made fentanyl can be many times more powerful and toxic than morphine and can be mixed into other street drugs. It is sometimes sold to unsuspecti­ng buyers as OxyContin or heroin.

Police say they have been seizing record amounts of fentanyl in communitie­s around Alberta, including more than 88,000 tablets since last April.

RCMP Deputy Commission­er Marianne Ryan said organized crime is a driving force behind the making and marketing of the drug known on the street as “greenies.”

“None of my police officers want to notify someone of the death of their loved one, especially when it could have been prevented,” she said.

Fentanyl made by pharmaceut­ical companies is used to treat severe pain or to manage pain after surgery. Illegal fentanyl is made in clandestin­e drug labs and sold in pills or powder.

The B.C. Coroners Service said this month that fentanyl was detected in about a quarter of 330 overdose deaths in the province last year, compared with five per cent in 2012.

Matthew Young with the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse said his group issued an alert in June 2013 that illicit fentanyl made in organized crime labs posed a danger.

He said since then the centre has received anecdotal reports from across the country of fatal and non-fatal overdoses linked to non-pharmaceut­ical fentanyl.

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