Pubdate: Sat, 08 Oct 2016 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2016 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/send_a_letter Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Kevin Rollason Page: B1 CITY POLICE TO CARRY NALOXONE TO COMBAT FENTANYL ODS WINNIPEG police officers will soon join fire and paramedic emergency workers in carrying the antidote to fentanyl overdoses. Deputy police chief Danny Smyth confirmed to the Winnipeg Police Board Friday they are working with health officials on how officers can carry doses of Naloxone and administer it. Smyth said one concern is the lifesaving drug can't be used in temperatures lower than 4 C. According to various pharmaceutical websites, the drug works at temperatures up to 25 C. "We will have to figure out how officers will carry the drug," he said. "We are hoping to have something worked out in one or two months." Smyth said there have been three drug-overdose deaths in the last week, and police are still waiting to see if they were related to fentanyl use. But Smyth said they have little choice but to figure out a way police officers can administer the drug. "We are going to encounter people who have overdosed," he said. And Smyth added that, based on an experience in the United States where officers using a stun grenade were overcome after inadvertently exploding fentanyl bottles, "we are becoming more aware of officers being exposed to airborne particles." Coun. Scott Gillingham (St. JamesBrooklands-Weston) said he's glad police are working with both the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority and the Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service on the issue. "This is a dynamic situation, and the police board will be in regular communication with the service as to the service's needs and response to address these drug calls," Gillingham said. "The board is committed to officer safety. Any concern the service may have regarding potential risk to their members in dealing with fentanyl calls will be discussed with the board and addressed accordingly." Last May, almost 400 firefighters in the city were given the ability to administer the emergency medication that reverses the effects of opiates including fentanyl. The firefighters and paramedics are administering the drug by needle into the thighs or shoulder muscles of patients. Last year, firefighters and paramedics responded to almost 100 fentanyl overdoses in the city, and of these, about 45 per cent saw the people in cardiac or respiratory arrest. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt