Toronto Star

WayHome allows opioid antidote

Festival patrons can trade the syringes in naloxone kits with nasal-spray alternativ­e

- SALMAAN FAROOQUI THE CANADIAN PRESS

An Ontario music festival has reversed a policy that would have banned attendees from bringing their own injectable naloxone kits, saying patrons will be able to trade syringes of the opioid overdose antidote for a nasal spray with the same effect. The WayHome Music and Arts Festival, taking place near Barrie, Ont., this weekend, says it changed its policy after hearing concerns from those who planned to attend.

Naloxone is an antidote to the powerful opioid fentanyl. Fentanyl is responsibl­e for a growing number of overdose-related deaths. The drug is sometimes found mixed with other drugs such as cocaine.

WayHome’s previous policy didn’t allow attendees to bring naloxoneco­ntaining syringes. Organizers said medical staff on site would be the only ones with the antidote.

Attendees will now be able to trade their naloxone kits for Narcan, a nasal spray version of the antidote.

“In an effort to meet the concerns of those in possession of injectable naloxone kits, we will now be offering the spray in exchange for the injectable alternativ­e at the gate,” festival spokespers­on Todd Jenereaux said Tuesday.

Ottawa resident Maegan Mason was one attendees who had been concerned about WayHome’s earlier position. She said she was in contact with the festival for the last week and was told she wouldn’t be allowed to bring her injectable naloxone kit. On Tuesday, she said she was ecstatic to hear that the policy had changed.

“It’s made my weekend feel a lot safer and I have a big weight lifted off my shoulders,” said Mason.

The 19-year-old said the earlier policy had left her concerned that someone experienci­ng an overdose wouldn’t be able to find a medical profession­al in time whilst in a crowd of thousands.

“Not only can you not see where the first aid tent is or where the medics are, but they can’t see you,” said Mason, who said getting out of the crowd could take 15 minutes.

If attendees have their own opioid overdose-reversing kit, they can administer the antidote and then find medical profession­als, she said.

Deanna VandenBroe­k, a health promoter with the public health department in Peterborou­gh, Ont., said she couldn’t think of a single negative outcome from festival attendees having the opioid overdose antidote themselves, especially because the antidote is harmless even if used when not needed.

“If (naloxone) is only going to be in certain places and held by certain people, it just means that much more time to get it to the person who’s overdosing,” VandenBroe­k explained.

In certain cases, she said that administer­ing naloxone as soon as possible “could be the difference between life and death.”

WayHome, now entering its third year, starts Friday and will run until Sunday night. The festival in OroMedonte, Ont., will feature artists Frank Ocean, Flume and Imagine Dragons as headliners.

 ?? RICK CLIFFORD/REPUBLIC LIVE ?? WayHome festival says it changed its policy on naloxone kits after concerns from those who planned to attend.
RICK CLIFFORD/REPUBLIC LIVE WayHome festival says it changed its policy on naloxone kits after concerns from those who planned to attend.

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