Toronto Star

Overdoses, one fatal, spark new concern

Four others in serious condition after ecstasy use at two city dance clubs

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

Five overdoses near Toronto nightclubs early Saturday, including one that killed a 24-year-old woman, triggered a health warning and calls for clubs and authoritie­s to take new steps to save lives.

Police say the overdoses involved the party drug ecstasy, also known as ecstasy. Tests should reveal if the woman also ingested fentanyl, a toxic anesthetic sometimes mixed into other drugs, or another substance.

The overdoses near Uniun Nightclub, near Adelaide and Portland Sts., and Rebel Nightclub at Polson Pier are part of an alarming trend, said Councillor Joe Cressy, who chairs the city’s drug strategy.

“With the arrival of fentanyl, a broader swath of Torontonia­ns are now at risk of a fatal overdose,” he said in an interview.

“This crisis is at the stage where people doing recreation­al drugs like MDMA or a line (of cocaine) are at real risk of death.”

The 24-year-old woman died in the hospital after collapsing and being found in cardiac arrest near Uniun at about 12:30 a.m. Another woman who later collapsed nearby was hospitaliz­ed in serious condition. Two men and a woman were also hospitaliz­ed in serious condition after paramedics found them at about 1:30 a.m. a short distance from Rebel.

Although some regard ecstasy as a safe drug, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health warns of “a growing number of deaths,” often related to dehydratio­n and overheatin­g.

Six overdoses were reported at Rebel in December, including a young woman who died.

A Toronto widow, Jody McLennan, recently went public about the February death of her 25-year-old husband, Oghenovo Avwunufe, who had snorted a small amount of fentanylla­ced cocaine at home with friends.

Front-line city staff at agencies including the TTC are being trained on the use of the opioid antidote naloxone, said Cressy, who has helped groups of bar staff get training on naloxone kits that are free upon request at most pharmacies.

The city’s harm-reduction plan calls for quick testing of drugs at three planned safe-injection sites so users can ensure they are not laced with something else.

And Toronto Public Health is working with a community project that aims to bring such testing into nightclubs, said Cressy.

Ink Entertainm­ent, which operates both Uniun and Rebel, said in a statement Saturday that the company is “shocked and saddened” by the woman’s death, and the clubs are cooperatin­g with police. With files from Brennan Doherty and Vjosa Isai

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada