Toronto Star

Fentanyl in OD kit an ‘isolated incident’

- JAREN KERR STAFF REPORTER

In what the province is calling an “isolated incident,” fentanyl was found in a naloxone kit assembled at a pharmacy, the Star has learned.

A person received a naloxone kit, which is used to reverse opioid overdoses, on Monday from a Shoppers Drug Mart in an undisclose­d location in Ontario, only to find fentanyl inside.

Fentanyl is an opioid that has caused thousands of deaths in recent years, spurring concerns of a crisis across North America.

Opioids are medically used for pain relief, but people have also used them to get high.

In a statement, Shoppers Drug Mart called the incident “a considerab­le error, and one that absolutely should not have happened.”

The owner-pharmacist retrieved the fentanyl from the customer and apologized, the statement said.

“It is important that customers understand that this isolated event should not reduce their confidence in naloxone kits as an effective response for accidental opioid overdose.”

The Ontario College of Pharmacist­s is investigat­ing the incident.

“The pharmacy is fully co-operating, and we’re confident that immediate action has been taken to begin to determine how it happened and what could have been done to prevent it,” said college spokespers­on Todd Leach.

“We are not aware of similar incidents happening at any other pharmacies.”

According to multiple pharmacist­s at Shoppers Drug Mart across the GTA, the pharmacies order the components of the kit and assemble them in house.

“In most pharmacies, there is no access to fentanyl,” Laura Gallant, press secretary for Ontario’s ministry of health, said in a phone interview.

She said the pharmacy that gave away the kit with fentanyl inside had the opioid because it is close to a hospice where the drug is sometimes administer­ed.

“This was an isolated incident at one location only and there is no known risk to the public,” she said in a statement.

Naloxone can be administer­ed through injection or nasal spray, and kits are available for free at pharmacies, shelters and community agencies across the province.

The province distribute­d about 80,000 kits last year. At least 1,460 Canadians died from apparent opioid-related deaths in the first half of 2017, according to the latest report from the Public Health Agency of Canada.

Between July and September 2017, there were 2,449 emergency department visits related to opioid overdoses in Ontario.

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