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Fentanyl Overdose Deaths Increase Triggers a State of Emergency in Canada

by Reshma Anand on Apr 16 2016 12:26 PM

The powerful painkiller was found to be responsible in 64 out of 201 illicit drug overdose deaths in the province in the first three months of 2016.

Fentanyl Overdose Deaths Increase Triggers a State of Emergency in Canada
British Columbia province, located in the western side of Canada has prompted authorities to declare a public health emergency due to a rise in fentanyl overdose deaths.
"The recent surge in overdoses is a huge concern for us," said British Columbia Health Minister Terry Lake, who declared the emergency on April 14th.

The powerful painkiller was found to be responsible in 64 out of 201 illicit drug overdose deaths in the Pacific coast province in the first three months of 2016, he said.

The proportion of overdose deaths in which fentanyl was detected has steadily increased from five percent in 2012 to approximately 31 percent last year and persisted through the first three months of 2016.

Lake warned that without immediate action taken to stem this tide, total British Columbia overdose deaths could rise to a record 600 to 800 this year, from 474 in 2015.

Fentanyl, which is up to 50 times more potent than heroin and up to 100 times more powerful than morphine, is a synthetic opioid usually prescribed for patients with advanced cancer pain.

But increasingly street drugs have been found to be laced with it. A similar opioid crisis has been reported in other parts of Canada and in the neighboring United States.

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In Sacramento, California investigators said they believe a version of the drug was produced in China and smuggled into the United States through Mexico.

In order to tackle the problem in Canada, Lake said health officials need real-time information on fentanyl-linked overdoses in order to better target outreach, bad drug warnings, awareness campaigns and distribution of naloxone -- which blocks opiate receptors in the nervous system, and is used to treat opioid overdoses.

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Hundreds of British Columbia firefighters and pharmacists, as well as opioid users and their families and friends have so far been trained to use naloxone. Lake said the program would be quickly expanded.

Source-AFP


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