Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

New Fraser Health Poster Campaign Raises Awareness Of Opioid Overdoses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Aug, 2016 12:00 PM
    SURREY, B.C. — Fraser Health has launched a poster ad campaign bolstering its ongoing drive to raise awareness of what it says is the overdose crisis in British Columbia.
     
    The posters will be displayed at transit stops, bars and restaurants, and are aimed at recreational and regular drug users, their families and friends.
     
    One message on the  stark, black and white posters says: "If you use drugs: Have a plan. Go slowly. Use with a buddy. Carry naloxone."
     
    The posters also offer instructions for anyone finding an overdose victim, directing them to call 911, start emergency breathing and use naloxone, which can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose.
     
    Fraser Health says in a news release that it is confident about the effectiveness of the campaign because the posters were tested in focus groups of regular and recreational drug users.
     
     
    In April, B.C.'s provincial health officer declared a public health emergency linked to the soaring number of opioid overdoses, and the declaration remains in effect.
     
    Dr. Victoria Lee, Fraser Health's chief medical health officer, says the poster campaign is an extension of the health authority's ongoing public awareness campaign, but she says much more has been done to fight overdose deaths.
     
    "We've created new substance-use beds to provide safe and supportive environments for people (who) require additional support on their road to recovery," Lee says in the release.
     
    Over the last 12 to 18 months, Fraser Health has opened 50 new substance-use beds, including a three-bed program for youth and a 12-bed facility for women who are pregnant or have newborns.
     
    A further 97 beds are slated to open by 2017 across the region, which stretches from Burnaby, through Surrey to White Rock and east to Hope.
     
     
    The announcement of the poster campaign and the update on available substance-use beds comes as Fraser Health prepares to mark International Overdose Awareness Day on Aug. 31.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT
    GURDEV “Dave” Hair, 45, of Abbotsford was killed in a shooting on Wednesday night in the 3100-block of Crown Court of Abbotsford, the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) announced on Thursday. He was known to police.

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently
    US presidential candidate Donald Trump has more psychopathic traits than Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, a new Oxford study has claimed.

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — Shergo Kurdi lifts his shirt to reveal a pale, mottled patchwork of burn scars on his belly and chest — a legacy, he says, of years spent ironing fabric in a Turkish clothing factory after he and his family fled war-torn Syria in 2012.

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana
    VANCOUVER — A study by researchers at the University of British Columbia suggests that while the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana causes laziness, adding a medicinal component of pot doesn't change that behaviour.

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    Extremist Literature Common In Canadian Mosques, Islamic School Libraries, Study Says

    The study, titled "Lovers of the Death"? — Islamist Extremism in Mosques and Schools, says what worried them was not the presence of extremist literature, but that they found nothing but such writings in several libraries.

    Extremist Literature Common In Canadian Mosques, Islamic School Libraries, Study Says

    Man Hospitalized After Being Found Unresponsive At Halifax Police Headquarters

    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's independent police watchdog is investigating the case of a man found unresponsive in cells at Halifax police headquarters.

    Man Hospitalized After Being Found Unresponsive At Halifax Police Headquarters