Pubdate: Fri, 15 Aug 2014 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2014 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.thespec.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Molly Hayes Page: A1 RACE ON TO GET LETHAL HEROIN OFF THE STREETS City officials looking for samples, while handing out free emergency antidote kits to avoid more deaths Hamilton police say they've not yet seized samples of a lethal grade of heroin being sold across the city. "We don't at this point, and that is part of the problem," Deputy Police Chief Eric Girt said at a media briefing Thursday about a recent spike in suspected heroin deaths. "It could be all kinds of combinations of drugs. One of the things that has recently emerged is Fentanyl, which has a high potency =C2=85 but it could be anything - cocaine, crack. We do know, historically, dealers have used things like rat poison, baking soda =C2=85 they're not particularly interested i n quality control." He could not give a number of overdoses or deaths suspected to be linked to the drugs. Police issued a public warning July 31, warning opioid users to be wary of the potentially lethal drug. At least three people have died from heroin overdoses since then, the family of 23-year-old Pauline Bearfoot, who died last Friday, says they were told. Another victim, Alicia Upham, 27, died three days before that. As police continue to investigate what it is and who's selling it, the city's Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Elizabeth Richardson said public health is focusing on getting free antidote kits in the hands of drug users across the city. About 50 kits have been handed out since city officials launched the Hamilton Overdose Prevention and Education (HOPE) program in May. The kits include opioid antidote Naloxone (narcan), which when used right away can reverse the effects of an overdose long enough to get a user proper medical help. Lloyd Bryer says he has been advocating for narcan for years. An addict himself, Bryer says he's been clean almost 20 years, but knows how crucial they are to saving lives. "I could probably give away 10 today," he said in a phone interview from the Wesley Centre - just blocks from the Barton Street East memorial set up for Bearfoot, who died of a possible heroin overdose. Debbie Bang, a manager of the addiction service program at St. Joseph's Healthcare, agrees more kits need to be dispersed. And while she praises Public Health for launching the program, she wonders whether there are other ways to get narcan out to those who need it. "We need to make it as easy as possible to get it. Public Health is doing a great job of doing that, but still we're talking about people who don't trust the system, who have reasons not to trust the professionals," she says. Bang stresses that the recent spike of overdoses could be caused by any number of factors: "There's a constant market for enhancing what's available," she said. It was paramedics who sounded the alarm that a lethal grade of heroin seemed to be circulating on Hamilton streets, after receiving six potential overdose calls in three hours one shift last month. "I would hope that people would be worried right now, people who are actively using. What we always forget, though, is with a heroin addiction the withdrawal is so incredibly awful that people are trying desperately to get something to take the edge off," Bang said. Overdose prevention kits are free from the city, distributed by Public Health nurses and can be delivered. To get one, call Public Health at 905-528-5894. Police are also asking anyone who believes they're in possession of the heroin to contact police so it can be tested. "While we understand people may be apprehensive =C2=85 we ask that in the interest of determining the composition that they be turned into police at the police station, or we can pick them up," Girt says. Anyone with information is asked to call the vice and drug branch at 905-546-3883 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt