Windsor

Windsor police consider naloxone kits for officers

Three Winnipeg officers were forced to self-administer naloxone Monday after a possible exposure to fentanyl. The opioid comes in many different forms and even casual contact can lead to an accidental overdose.

Spike in Fentanyl abuse results in need for naloxone antidote kits for police

Each naloxone kit contains two viles of the antidote that reverses the effects of an overdose and provides the person having the overdose extra time to get to hospital. (Sherry Vivian/CBC)

Windsor police are working with the province's chiefs of police to allow officers to carry naloxone kits, life-saving antidotes used to counteract overdoses of the opioid fentanyl.

Three Winnipeg officers were forced to self-administer naloxone Monday after a possible exposure to fentanyl. The opioid comes in many different forms and even casual contact can lead to an accidental overdose.

Windsor police deputy chief Vince Power describes the Winnipeg incident as an example of the increasing need for a best practices protocol. But the force must first consider the cost of the kits and officer training.

"Certainly the trend is sweeping across the country, that's why in Ontario it is being studied by many police services," he said.

Joe Couto, the director of government relations and communications for the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police, says they want officers across the province to carry the kits, not just for their safety but also to help others suffering an overdose.

"Our officers are sometimes the first on the scene when someone is having an overdose, so having them outfitted with naloxone kits will save lives," said Couto.

Police services in Brantford, Kitchener-Waterloo and Barrie have already started distributing the kits to their officers. 

But Couto says the OACP doesn't want to see a "patchwork" approach across the province. Instead, they prefer a standardized protocol to administering them. Even with a standard practice, he wants much of the decision making in the hands of the individual police services.

"It should be a local decision who gets it, how many officers get it, whether they're in the cars or on the officers person, but not having [them] is not an option," said Couto.

The OACP is working with the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services and the Ministry of Health to develop the strategy. 

"This is a health care crisis we have in Ontario," said Couto.

He hopes to have the strategy in place by the end of the year.