Pubdate: Sat, 05 Aug 2017 Source: Intelligencer, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2017, The Belleville Intelligencer Contact: http://www.intelligencer.ca/letters Website: http://www.intelligencer.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2332 Page: A6 HAVING KITS AVAILABLE KEY IN OVERDOSE FIGHT Not even a full week into August and local health officials are reporting three overdoses in the region. Three. In less than a week. If that number isn't enough to make people realize there's an issue in the Quinte region it's hard to imagine what would. In recent months the incidents of opioid use and overdoses has climbed in Quinte and it's enough, now, that health officials are urging people to use precaution. When people are being told if they choose to use illicit drugs they need to ensure people know where they are and what they are doing it's quite telling. Drug users and their friends and family are being encouraged by Hastings Prince Edward Public Health to ensure they have a Naloxone kit nearby at all times in case of an overdose. It's not that much different than clean needle-exchange programs where a pro-active approach is being embraced to prevent deaths. "These people are definitely in a life-threatening situation," Doug Socha, Hastings-Quinte EMS chief said this week. Paramedics are part of the taskforce being spearheaded by Public Health to help battle the growing number of overdoses connected to illicit drugs containing fentanyl.. "Because we have seen a sudden spike in overdoses we really wanted to ensure that the public was aware," explained Stephanie McFaul, a program manager with Hastings Prince Edward Public Health. "We have been doing enhanced surveillance. There are drugs in our community and they're causing people to overdose." Frequent users should get their hands on a Naloxone kit, which is available at the health unit and a select number of participating pharmacies in the area. Free Naloxone kits are available to current and past opioid users, as well as the family and friends of current or previous users. There has been - not just in our communities, but across the country - a heightened sense of panic surrounding these drugs and what they are doing to drug users. It's a panic that certainly seems warranted when presented with figures such as three overdoses in less than a week. As McFaul, and so many others, has said, even a small dose of fentanyl can be fatal and when it can easily be mixed in to drugs without users knowing, the result can be devastating. The Quinte community needs to continue to work together to address this issue and making the kits readily available is a great step toward preventing deaths which are unnecessary. Heightened awareness can only be a good thing. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt