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Two deaths prompt Orillia OPP to issue warning about lethal drugs

Woman in her 50s found dead in Oro-Medonte home on July 9 and the next day, man in his 40s died at Orillia home, say police, noting both deaths are under investigation
2021-05-20-opp-cruiser

Orillia Ontario Provincial Police are issuing public warnings after two people recently died from suspected opioid overdoses, according to a news release.

On July 9 around 6 p.m., officers responded with Simcoe County paramedics to a report of a woman in her 50s found dead at a home in Oro-Medonte Township. The following day on July 10 OPP and paramedics found a male in his 40s dead at a home in Orillia.

These investigations are ongoing with members from the Orillia Detachment Major Crime Unit, the release said.

Fentanyl is an extremely potent synthetic opioid up to 100 times more potent than morphine and up to 40-50 times more potent than heroin. Carfentanil is a synthetic opioid up to 100 times more potent than fentanyl. The prevalence of illicit opioids distributed through drug trafficking networks continues to increase. Trafficking in opioids is a very serious offence.

Drug dealers are knowingly distributing products that cause harm and could kill, the release added.

Fentanyl can be lethal in very small quantities. If someone's drug of choice is mixed with or contains fentanyl, it can potentially kill. Opioid users have a higher risk of experiencing an overdose due to fentanyl potency, especially when the fentanyl is illicit and not sourced from a pharmaceutical company. It is impossible for a user to determine the quantity of fentanyl they may be using because you can't see, smell or taste it.

  • Symptoms of fentanyl/opioid exposure can include:
  • Difficulty walking, talking or staying awake
  • Blue lips or nails
  • Very small pupils
  • Cold and clammy skin
  • Dizziness and confusion
  • Extreme drowsiness
  • Choking, gurgling or snoring sounds
  • Inability to wake up, even when shaken or shouted at
  • Slow, weak or not breathing

If you, or someone you know, experiences any of these symptoms, stay at the scene and call 911, police say.

The Good Samaritan Drug Overdose Act (GSDOA) provides some legal protection for individuals who seek emergency help during an overdose. The GSDOA protects the person who seeks help, whether they stay or leave from the overdose scene before help arrives, the person experiencing the overdose, and anyone else who is at the scene when help arrives. For more information, visit opp.ca/overdose.

Naloxone is a drug that temporarily reverses the effects of opioids, including respiratory depression, sedation and hypotension, and allows time for medical help to arrive. The OPP has provided frontline officers with naloxone intranasal spray to help protect officers and the public from potential fentanyl exposure when attending an opioid-related incident.

Members of the public who may be at risk of experiencing an overdose, or know someone who is, are encouraged to acquire a naloxone kit available free of charge at the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit, Community Health Centres, and many pharmacies across the region. Learn more: www.simcoemuskokahealth.org/Topics/drugs/opioids

Anyone with any information about these investigations or any drug trafficking in our communities is asked to call OPP at 1-888-310-1122 or Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).