Pubdate: Tue, 11 Aug 2015 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Dale Bass OVERDOSES OVERTURNED Today's new reality for medical staff like Ian Mitchell and Kirsten McLaughlin is simple."In the old days, you'd buy drugs and wonder if there "In the old days, you'd buy drugs and wonder if there was really nothing in them," Mitchell said. "These days, you buy drugs and worry you might die." Mitchell, a doctor, and McLaughlin, a public-health nurse, have been leading the way in dealing with the situation, running the first program in Canada that sees the emergency room at Royal Inland Hospital dispensing naloxone kits with the tools needed to help someone overdosing on an opiate. Naloxone (best known by the trade name Narcan) is an opiate antagonizer, a drug that can quickly reverse an overdose from opiates. The beauty of it, McLaughlin said, is if it's used on someone who is not overdosing but showing similar symptoms - someone very drunk, for example - it won't harm them. The kits are easy to use, but require some education first, McLaughlin said. They come with gloves, two syringes with needles that immediately retract after being used, two vials of naloxone and a container to store them, along with alcohol swabs. There's also a special type of breathing mask with a protective barrier, should the person administering the drug need to do resuscitation, as well. With more heroin, oxycodone, heroin and Percocet on Kamloops streets, Mitchell and Kirsten McLaughlin want to see the program expand. Since March 2014, 44 kits have been handed out at the RIH ER and there have been three documented cases of their use reversing overdoses in Kamloops. Mitchell said a drug user went to the ER to get one of the kits. He learned how to use naloxone and took it home just in case it might be needed. "That night, he used it on a buddy," Mitchell said. Since starting the program at RIH, two other hospitals - Royal Alexandra in Edmonton and St. Paul's in Vancouver - have begun dispensing the kits. Mitchell and McLaughlin have spoken at many conferences, workshops or gatherings about the success of the Kamloops program. Recently, for example, they spoke at a gathering in Alberta, a province that saw more than 100 deaths last year due to fentanyl. In the Interior Health Authority region, another 588 kits have been distributed through other health-care facilities and organizations, including ASK Wellness Centre. They are needed, Mitchell said, due to the influx in B.C. of fentanyl, most often masquerading as oxycodone tablets. It's led to four deaths in Vancouver in the past two weeks, including a 17-year-old boy, a couple in their early 30s who had a young child and a 31-year-old man. On the weekend, Vancouver saw 16 overdoses police said are linked to pink heroin laced with fentanyl. "People are buying some pills and just expect to have a good time," McLaughlin said. "They don't know they're buying fentanyl." Fentanyl is a synthetic opiate 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine. Mitchell said he has also heard the drug is being mixed in with cannabis, which is why the B.C. Centre for Disease Control urges users to know the source of their drugs, rather than advise against using drugs. "We know people will use drugs," Mitchell said. "This is about harm reduction." There's an education component to the kits, McLaughlin said. That was one of the issues debated before deciding to make the kits available in the ER. "It's not like you can go home and practise on an orange," she said, noting the kits are designed to be easy to use. Injections are to go into a muscle. Mitchell added he's hopeful Health Canada will soon approve an aspirator that can be attached to a syringe, removing the need for a needle. Another reality, he said, is while intravenous drug users are comfortable around needles, most people aren't. In the need for quick action to use naloxone, any hesitation can make the difference between success and, potentially, death. It's why the pair wants to see the kits in more locations. There are four other locations in the city where the kits can be accessed: Baker Clinic at 430 Fifth Ave., Kamloops Methadone office at 103-220 Third Ave., King Street Clinic at 126 King St. and Interior Chemical Dependency Office at 239 Lansdowne St. Other locations throughout the IHA area can be found by inputting a community or postal code online at www.towardtheheart.com/site-locator - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom