Pubdate: Tue, 23 Jan 2018 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2018 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/letters Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Randy Richmond Page: A1 KEEP GUARDS UP AGAINST ODS Londoner says security officers, often first on the scene, should be trained to use life-saving naloxone kits In the wake of several overdose deaths and an experience saving a man's life, a London security guard wants to spread the word about life-saving naloxone. "The really neat thing with the naloxone kits is anybody is able to use it. It sounds like a scary thing and it can be, but it is one of those things that can be used by anybody," Mathew Granger said. Granger works for a London security firm and was on duty in central London last November when he noticed a group of people who seemed upset. He checked out the scene. "There was a male lying on the floor, lying on his back, pale white, blue lips. It was an apparent overdose." Granger started CPR. A bystander happened to have a naloxone kit on him. Naloxone is a drug that reverses opioid overdoses, and as fentanyl has spread through London, health officials have been encouraging injection drug users and people in contact with them to get a kit. The bystander was too rattled to use the naloxone, so Granger took out the needle and injected the man. "It seemed like forever, but it would have been probably 30 seconds. It was pretty quick from the time I administered it to the time he came to." As soon as he was revived - and before paramedics arrived - the man fled. The incident happened in November, but Granger hesitated to talk about it publicly. "This is no heroic story," he said. However, a London police release last week about three overdose deaths within 48 hours prompted him to speak out. "Every security guard has to have a basic first aid and CPR certificate. Although it's touched on in the CPR/first aid training program, there's not an in-depth training with regards to naloxone," said Granger, who now carries his own kit. "Being a security officer, sometimes you are a first responder," Granger said. "I think it's important with this (fentanyl) being as popular as it is, unfortunately, that security officers have that training, almost be a requirement or standard training like our first aid/CPR class." The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services regulates the private security industry by licensing individuals who have completed the required training and testing, spokesperson Brent Ross said. But "security personnel are not classified as first responders," Ross said. "The security guard training syllabus does not include specific references to naloxone. However, this does not preclude licensed agencies from providing their employees with additional training and equipment related to the specific nature of their assignments." Granger did an assignment on naloxone while taking Fanshawe College's police foundations course and took a lesson at a St. Thomas health clinic. "It gave me the reassurance to be able to act," he said. Though he used a needle to inject naloxone, there are nasal sprays available to make it even easier to help someone, Granger said. "Anybody can get the training, but people who will be first on scene, or responding to these situations, need to have the proper training or know how to take control of the situations." The stigma of drug use shouldn't prevent people who inject drugs, their friends, or the public from learning how to use naloxone, Granger said. "There is so much stigma around it," he said. "It's unfortunate because I believe lives are being sacrificed." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt