100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

Opioid overdose prevention kits to be made available in the NWT

With eight near-fatal fentanyl overdoses at Stanton Hospital last week, the Government of the Northwest Territories is looking at solutions to combat an opioid crisis in the North.

That includes making the life-saving drug naloxone readily available to the public in the event of an emergency.

RELATED: GNWT to roll out opioid overdose prevention kits Wednesday

RELATED: RCMP find fentanyl while investigating Yellowknife home

Naloxone temporarily reverses the effects of an opioid overdose, buying a patient crucial time to seek medical attention.

The drug has been carried on Yellowknife ambulances over the past few weeks according to city administration. An injectable version of naloxone has also been available at pharmacies across the NWT since the beginning of June.

Accessing the drug does not require a prescription, but for many smaller communities that don’t have a pharmacy in their area, naloxone is harder to get immediate access to.

Now, the GNWT has announced the creation of a pilot program to provide take-home injectable naloxone kits in the Northwest Territories. [pdf]

The kits would be available throughout the NWT at health centres, clinics and hospitals as part of an overdose prevention strategy.

The territory’s Department of Health and Social Services is currently developing the program to help fill a gap in availability and provide as many options to the public as possible.

While there’s no exact timeline, the GNWT expects the kits to be available in the next few weeks, and says the development of the program is a ‘very high priority’.

Access recommended for friends and family

In an information sheet on opioid overdose, the World Health Organization (WHO) says friends and family of people at risk are most likely to witness an opioid overdose.

As a result, WHO recommends making naloxone readily available to those most likely to be on the scene when an overdose happens.

“If a friend or family member has access to naloxone, he or she may be able to reverse the effects of an opioid overdose while waiting for medical care to arrive,” the report read.

“A number of programs around the world have shown that providing naloxone to people likely to witness an opioid overdose … could substantially reduce the deaths resulting from opioid overdose.”

Task force meeting next week

The GNWT has also put together an opioid task force to further examine issues surrounding opioid abuse and overdose risks in the territory.

The group will be led by Dr. André Corriveau, the territory’s chief public health officer. Other senior health officials and the coroner’s office will also be involved.

“It is very important for coroners and medical examiners’ systems to work with public health,” said Cathy Menard, the territory’s chief coroner.

“I think they work side-by-side in a lot of cases, so it’s really important we work together, that we’re not working in silos.”

The task force will have its first meeting sometime next week.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

“It’s going to change our town forever,”: Reverend, South Peace MLA react to Tumbler Ridge shooting

“We are trying to support everyone we can through this.”That is from Reverend Gerald Krauss from the New Life Assembly Church in Tumbler Ridge following yesterday’s (Tuesday) mass shooting in the South Peace community.

At least ten people dead following school shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C.

RCMP say ten people have died following a school shooting in Tumbler Ridge B.C., a community located about 400 kilometres north east of Prince George. Mounties received a report of an active shooter at the Tumbler Ridge Secondary School  around 1:20 MT Tuesday.

“Wind chills near minus 50 to minus 60 continue” across territory

According to Environment Canada’s report, the temperature will moderate to some degree during the daytime for "some communities" but will likely drop again overnight. Wind chills of up to -60 are expected in the Aklavik region until Thursday morning, while in Colville Lake and the Tuktoyaktuk region, the extreme cold is anticipated to extend into the weekend.

Snowkings’ organizers say volunteers play important roles in festival

Snowkings’ Winter Festival organizers are busy getting preparations underway for this year’s much anticipated snowcastle. The Snowkings’ snow and ice fortress is expected to burst back to life on Yellowknife Bay on March 1. For 31 years, the festival has attracted thousands of visitors from across the territory and from across the globe. Organizers are looking for people within the local community of Yellowknife who are interested in volunteer roles.

Climate resilience capacity program reaches Hay River and Inuvik

A series of workshops focussed on “climate resiliency” have reached three hubs of the N.W.T. Organizers say the initiative has helped to build local capacity around recovery, resilience and emergency preparedness. The gatherings brought together about 30 representatives from Indigenous governments, Northern NGOs,community organizations, and health and wellness workers for psychological first aid training and community-led planning focused on climate resilience.