Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Spending $30k To Buy Naloxone Kits For Police For Opioid Overdoses

IANS, 20 Dec, 2016 12:13 PM
    WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government is spending nearly $30,000 to purchase naloxone kits for police officers in Winnipeg and other municipal and First Nation police services across the province,.
     
    Naloxone is a medication used to reverse the effects of opioids and prevent fatal overdoses.
     
    The Winnipeg Police Service will receive 1,300 naloxone kits, while another 200 kits will be distributed to municipal and First Nations police services.
     
    Officers will be trained to use the naloxone kits if they encounter someone on a call who may be experiencing an opioid overdose or if another officer has been exposed while at work.
     
    Justice Minister Heather Stefanson says fentanyl is becoming more common in Winnipeg and throughout the province, and the kits will protect officers and the public.
     
    Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid narcotic, linked to an increasing number of overdoses and deaths over the last several years.
     
    Funding for the kits has been provided from the Federal Proceeds of Crime Fund.
     
    "Fentanyl and other opioids are incredibly dangerous and potentially fatal even in small amounts, so many people might be at risk without even realizing it," said Kelvin Goertzen, seniors minister.
     
    "This measure will support the other important work underway in Manitoba to deal with fentanyl."
     
    This fall, the Manitoba government launched a new social media campaign to highlight the dangers associated with fentanyl.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Child Porn Charges For Dawson Creek, B.C., Man After Abbotsford Police Probe

    A Dawson Creek, B.C., man has been charged with child pornography offences following an investigation that spanned the province.

    Child Porn Charges For Dawson Creek, B.C., Man After Abbotsford Police Probe

    Trump Tower Becomes 'Dump Tower' On Google Maps

    Trump Tower Becomes 'Dump Tower' On Google Maps
    Someone has renamed Donald Trump's midtown Manhattan building on Google Maps, and the new moniker isn't very flattering.

    Trump Tower Becomes 'Dump Tower' On Google Maps

    Top Soldier Angry, Disappointed Sexual Misconduct Still Major Problem

    Top Soldier Angry, Disappointed Sexual Misconduct Still Major Problem
    The study's findings include an estimated 960 men and women who say they were sexually assaulted in the last year — some of which occurred after the last time Gen. Jonathan Vance read the riot act to members of the Canadian Forces.

    Top Soldier Angry, Disappointed Sexual Misconduct Still Major Problem

    Trial Begins For Calgary Woman In Death Of Seven-year-old Son From Strep Infection

    Trial Begins For Calgary Woman In Death Of Seven-year-old Son From Strep Infection
    Tamara Lovett, who is 47, is charged with failing to provide the necessaries of life and with criminal negligence causing the death of her son.

    Trial Begins For Calgary Woman In Death Of Seven-year-old Son From Strep Infection

    Police Say 'Grand Theft Auto' Prompted Boy, 11, To Drive On Highway 400 In Vaughan, Ont.

    Police Say 'Grand Theft Auto' Prompted Boy, 11, To Drive On Highway 400 In Vaughan, Ont.
    Police got a call late Saturday night about a vehicle that was "all over the road" on Highway 400 in Vaughan, Ont.

    Police Say 'Grand Theft Auto' Prompted Boy, 11, To Drive On Highway 400 In Vaughan, Ont.

    Strike At Canada's Second-Busiest Commercial Border Crossing Enters Week 2

    Strike At Canada's Second-Busiest Commercial Border Crossing Enters Week 2
    Workers at the Blue Water Bridge — which links Point Edward, Ont. near Sarnia, Ont., and Port Huron, Mich. — began their strike on Nov. 21.

    Strike At Canada's Second-Busiest Commercial Border Crossing Enters Week 2