Close X
Sunday, September 29, 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

    Halifax 12-Year-Old Called 911 To Complain About Their Salad, RCMP Say

    Halifax 12-Year-Old Called 911 To Complain About Their Salad, RCMP Say
    — RCMP are issuing a gentle reminder about proper 911 use after a 12-year-old called to express their dislike of salad.  

    Halifax 12-Year-Old Called 911 To Complain About Their Salad, RCMP Say

    #BuyCanadian: Pocketbook Patriotism Takes Off Amid U.S. Trade Tensions

    #BuyCanadian: Pocketbook Patriotism Takes Off Amid U.S. Trade Tensions
    Social media users are pledging to #BuyCanadian amid a simmering trade standoff with the U.S., but experts say pocketbook patriotism may have unintended consequences on both sides of the border.

    #BuyCanadian: Pocketbook Patriotism Takes Off Amid U.S. Trade Tensions

    Teen Organizer Of Ontario Town's First Pride Parade Gets Surprise Call From PM

    A teenager behind an Ontario town's first Pride parade was still getting over his surprise on Thursday at having found himself taking a congratulatory phone call from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

    Teen Organizer Of Ontario Town's First Pride Parade Gets Surprise Call From PM

    Sexual Abuse At Canadian Schools Largely Perpetrated By Employees: Report

    Sexual Abuse At Canadian Schools Largely Perpetrated By Employees: Report
    Canadian Centre for Child Protection is calling for more transparency after a new report found school employees were responsible for 750 alleged sexual offences involving students.

    Sexual Abuse At Canadian Schools Largely Perpetrated By Employees: Report

    Another Chinese Student Extorted In So-called Virtual Kidnapping In Vancouver

    Another Chinese Student Extorted In So-called Virtual Kidnapping In Vancouver
    Vancouver police say a student from China has fallen victim to a so-called virtual kidnapping scheme, the third reported in the city this year.

    Another Chinese Student Extorted In So-called Virtual Kidnapping In Vancouver

    Groups Want Probe Into Vancouver Police Carding, Citing Racial Profiling

    Groups Want Probe Into Vancouver Police Carding, Citing Racial Profiling
    Indigenous and civil rights groups have asked British Columbia's police complaints commissioner to investigate a significant racial disparity in the Vancouver Police Department's use of street checks.

    Groups Want Probe Into Vancouver Police Carding, Citing Racial Profiling