Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatoon Firefighters Equipped With Fentanyl Antidote As Overdoses Rise

Darpan News Desk, 12 Jan, 2017 12:17 PM
    SASKATOON — The Saskatoon Fire Department says firefighters are now carrying an antidote to help reduce fentanyl and opioid overdoses.
     
    Assistant chief Rob Hogan says fire department primary care paramedics are equipped with naloxone, which can restore breathing to someone experiencing an overdose.
     
    Hogan says according to provincial health statistics, overdose deaths have risen dramatically for the past six years and this is the stark reality of the job first responders face.
     
    Fentanyl is an opioid that is 50 to 100 times more potent than heroin, oxycodone or morphine.
     
    Police have said many people unknowingly ingest fentanyl — which cannot be seen, smelled or tasted — when it's laced into other drugs.
     
    Hogan says that also puts everyone responding to an overdose call at risk because the smallest exposure from residue on a patient could kill a paramedic or another emergency worker.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Extremely Close' Winnipeg Family Distraught After Parents Killed During Cuban Vacation

    'Extremely Close' Winnipeg Family Distraught After Parents Killed During Cuban Vacation
    WINNIPEG — The three children of a Winnipeg couple who were killed in an ambulance collision while vacationing in Cuba are fundraising to help bring the bodies of their parents home and cover their funeral expenses.

    'Extremely Close' Winnipeg Family Distraught After Parents Killed During Cuban Vacation

    Former Newfoundland Star Athlete Pleads Not Guilty To First-degree Murder

    Former Newfoundland Star Athlete Pleads Not Guilty To First-degree Murder
      Five weeks have been set aside for the trial of Anne Norris, a 29-year-old former leading athlete, to start on Jan. 15 of next year.

    Former Newfoundland Star Athlete Pleads Not Guilty To First-degree Murder

    Ontario Agrees To Fund Toronto Supervised Injection Sites Amid Opioid Crisis

    Ontario Agrees To Fund Toronto Supervised Injection Sites Amid Opioid Crisis
    TORONTO — Ontario is committing to fund three supervised injection sites in Toronto at an estimated annual cost of $1.6 million and about $400,000 to create the spaces.

    Ontario Agrees To Fund Toronto Supervised Injection Sites Amid Opioid Crisis

    Cougar Sedated And Captured Outside Kelowna, B.C., Apartment

    Cougar Sedated And Captured Outside Kelowna, B.C., Apartment
    An unexpected and unwanted visitor to an apartment building in Kelowna, B.C., on Sunday night set off a quick response by police and the conservation service.

    Cougar Sedated And Captured Outside Kelowna, B.C., Apartment

    Indian-Origin Man Arrested for Shooting of U.S. Consular Official in Mexico

    Indian-Origin Man Arrested for Shooting of U.S. Consular Official in Mexico
    Impacto el Diario and El Mudo described Zia as being of "Hindu" origin, while the Cronica.com said he was "Indian." In Mexico sometimes "Hindu" and "Indian" used interchangeably as national identification, rather than religious.

    Indian-Origin Man Arrested for Shooting of U.S. Consular Official in Mexico

    No Arrests As Police In Vancouver Probe Apparently Targeted Shooting

    No Arrests As Police In Vancouver Probe Apparently Targeted Shooting
    A 58-year-old man was taken to hospital suffering from an apparent gunshot wound to the leg.

    No Arrests As Police In Vancouver Probe Apparently Targeted Shooting