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The buddy system: How drug users became amateur medics in Canada s opioid crisis

The buddy system: How drug users became amateur medics in Canada s opioid crisis
theglobeandmail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theglobeandmail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Family Doctor s Big Secret: $9K a Week Pushing Fentanyl

Quick-Thinking Police Officer Uses Narcan to Save Toddler Who Got Ahold of Some Fentanyl and Overdosed

Quick-Thinking Police Officer Uses Narcan to Save Toddler Who ‘Got Ahold of Some Fentanyl’ and Overdosed A California police officer was in the right place at the right time when a frantic mother flagged down his patrol car. Her unresponsive toddler had been exposed to the opiate fentanyl. Officer Aaron Khamosh managed to revive the child using Narcan, a drug developed to reverse the effects of an opiate overdose. In a Facebook post, Concord Police Department stated Khamosh was patrolling on March 26 when he was flagged down on Salvio Street by a woman. Her 2-year-old was unconscious on the back seat of a car and wasn’t breathing.

Raid near North East nets variety of drugs, one gun, two arrests

NORTH EAST — A man and a woman remained jailed Thursday after investigators confiscated nearly one pound of suspected heroin mixed with fentanyl, more than three-quarters of a pound of suspected methamphetamine, a loaded AR-15 pistol, and other evidence while raiding a residence near North East, according to Cecil County District Court records. Investigators identified the suspects as Robert O. Wilson, 35, of the unit block of Willard Drive near North East — where the drug raid occurred — and Anika Jackson, 48, of New Castle, Del. The seized drugs allegedly linked to Wilson have an estimated street value of more than $53,000, court records allege.

Mice study points to a promising treatment for relieving colitis pain without side effects

Mice study points to a promising treatment for relieving colitis pain without side effects A targeted opioid that only treats diseased tissues and spares healthy tissues relieves pain from inflammatory bowel disease without causing side effects, according to new research published in the journal Gut. The study, led by researchers at New York University College of Dentistry and Queen s University in Ontario, was conducted in mice with colitis, an inflammatory bowel disease marked by inflammation of the large intestine. Opioids, which are used to treat chronic pain in people with inflammatory bowel disease, relieve pain by targeting opioid receptors, including the mu opioid receptor. When opioids activate the mu opioid receptor in healthy tissues, however, they can cause severe and life-threatening side effects, including difficulty breathing, constipation, sedation, and addiction.

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