Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto Police Warn Of Dangerous Narcotics After 7 Fatal Overdoses Since Aug. 2

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Aug, 2018 11:41 AM
    Toronto police are warning about a batch of dangerous narcotics being sold downtown after seven overdose deaths in the city since Aug. 2.
     
     
    Police say they believe the drugs responsible are a deadly batch of fentanyl or carfentanil.
     
     
    Fentanyl is a synthetic painkiller about 100 times stronger than morphine and carfentanil is an even stronger opioid originally developed for veterinarians to sedate elephants and other large animals.
     
     
    These opioids have been blamed for the growing overdose crisis that federal health officials say killed at least 1,460 Canadians in the first half of 2017.
     
     
    The police warning comes a day after the Ontario government paused plans to open three new temporary overdose-prevention sites as it conducts a review to determine if such facilities will continue to operate.
     
     
    Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott said Monday that the Progressive Conservative government will make a decision on the sites, as well as more permanent facilities aimed at fighting the opioid crisis, by the end of September.
     
     
    She said sites set to open in Thunder Bay, St. Catharines and Toronto will be put on hold as the government decides if they "have merit."
     
     
    Figures from Toronto Public Health show that in 2016, fentanyl replaced heroin and morphine as the most commonly present opioid in overdose deaths. 
     
     
    The opioid was present in 48 per cent of accidental opioid deaths in 2016, compared to 31 per cent the year before.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Green Party Leader Elizabeth May Asks Lawyer To Investigate Bullying Claims

    OTTAWA — At the request of Elizabeth May herself, Toronto lawyer Sheila Block will investigate complaints that the leader of the federal Green party bullied and harassed some of her staff members.

    Green Party Leader Elizabeth May Asks Lawyer To Investigate Bullying Claims

    India Doesn't Need Nationalism After 70 Years Of Independence: Nayantara Sahgal

    India Doesn't Need Nationalism After 70 Years Of Independence: Nayantara Sahgal
    India doesn't need any lessons on nationalism 70 years after Independence, feels eminent writer and member of the Nehru-Gandhi family Nayantara Sahgal, dubbing the BJP's nationalism agenda a "load of rubbish".

    India Doesn't Need Nationalism After 70 Years Of Independence: Nayantara Sahgal

    Landscaper Now Facing Five Murder Charges In Case Of Missing Gay Men

    Landscaper Now Facing Five Murder Charges In Case Of Missing Gay Men
    TORONTO — Dismembered skeletal remains have been recovered from the bottom of large planter boxes at a home linked to an alleged serial killer who worked as a landscaper, Toronto police announced on Monday.

    Landscaper Now Facing Five Murder Charges In Case Of Missing Gay Men

    Change Is Needed To Encourage Women To Enter Politics, Says Justin Trudeau

    Change Is Needed To Encourage Women To Enter Politics, Says Justin Trudeau
    Trudeau told Liberal MPs that change is needed to encourage more women to enter politics.

    Change Is Needed To Encourage Women To Enter Politics, Says Justin Trudeau

    ICBC Posts $935m In Net Losses In First Nine Months Of Fiscal Year

    ICBC Posts $935m In Net Losses In First Nine Months Of Fiscal Year
    VANCOUVER — The financial crisis at British Columbia's public auto insurer is deepening, as $1.3 billion in net losses are now projected by the end of the current fiscal year.

    ICBC Posts $935m In Net Losses In First Nine Months Of Fiscal Year

    Canada To U.S.: Give Us A Deal, And We May Drop WTO Case

    Canada To U.S.: Give Us A  Deal, And We May Drop WTO Case
    MONTREAL — The Canadian government has suggested a way it might drop its major international trade case against the U.S.: with a softwood lumber deal.

    Canada To U.S.: Give Us A Deal, And We May Drop WTO Case