Calgary Herald

B.C. firefighte­rs help develop software to combat opioid overdoses crisis

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Firefighte­rs in Surrey, B.C., have turned to technology in the battle against opioid overdoses.

The fire department has partnered with Vancouver-based software developer GINQO to create a program that mines data from dispatch calls in real-time to identify clusters of overdoses.

Those clusters can be a sign that a batch of tainted drugs is circulatin­g on the streets and the program can alert first responders to a potentiall­y escalating situation.

The software kicks in automatica­lly when data from emergency calls correspond­s with specific criteria, such as more than three overdoses within one square kilometre in a four-hour period.

The Surrey Fire Service started using the program late last June and has since received 10 alerts about overdose clusters.

Fire Chief Len Garis says when the department gets an alert, they can make sure they have the resources available to respond properly. “We were basically sitting and waiting for things to happen and now we can see the surges coming and we can adapt to it,” he said.

The department was inspired to take action after 17 overdoses over a 72-hour period in December 2016, Garis said. The overdoses were later linked to what appeared to be tainted batches of crack cocaine and pure cocaine, he said.

The firefighte­rs responded to an average of 7.5 overdose calls per day in Surrey last year.

“There’s a huge strain on our first responders because we’ve been running pillar to post trying to address this,” Garis said.

The department has also formed a partnershi­p with Statistics Canada aimed at trying to determine a typology on individual­s who are overdosing.

Officials and software developers are working to make the alert program predictive so it can say when and where overdoses may occur.

That will help first responders become proactive instead of reactive, allowing them to prevent overdoses, Garis said.

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