New drug mixture leading to spike in overdoses in Red Deer
A local organization providing harm reduction services throughout central Alberta is raising the alarm over a new mixture of drugs hitting the streets – aligning with a spike in overdoses last month.
Sarah Fleck, clinical manager at Turning Point in Red Deer says there is something beyond opioids being mixed into the drugs their clients are using, resulting in different types of reactions than previously seen before.
“It initially looks the same so people have the depressed respiration but then they’re also appearing very drowsy,” explains Fleck. “But what we’re seeing after administration of naloxone and use of oxygen to reverse the opioid overdose, is that people are remaining in a semi-level of consciousness or decreased level of consciousness compared to what we’re used to. Sometimes they can remain in that level of consciousness for up to several hours after they’ve already had naloxone.”
Fleck says it’s indicative there is likely some sort of long-acting benzodiazepine, also a central nervous system depressant acting in addition to the opioid. Something Alberta Health Services (AHS) issued a Public Notice on in June.