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Grey County emergency exercise simulates mass opioid overdose

A large group training exercise at the Grey County Administration building simulated a mass opioid overdose at a large outdoor concert

Grey County’s annual emergency exercise tested local emergency response plans and the newly drafted Opioid Response Plan from the Grey Bruce Health Unit.

As the mock overdose scenario unfolded, the outdoor concert was cancelled but casualties continued to mount as tainted drugs were consumed in other locations.

First responders, municipal services, and healthcare services are reviewing lessons from the November 7 exercise to enhance emergency planning.

Grey County, the municipalities of West Grey and Owen Sound, the Grey Bruce Health Unit, Grey Bruce Health Services, South Bruce Grey Health Centre, Victim Services, paramedic services, police, fire and other partners all participated.

“I understand this may be the first time a mass opioid overdose has been used as a scenario to test emergency response,” said Grey County Warden Selwyn Hicks. “Overall, we learned a lot and were very pleased with the well-coordinated response from participants.”

“From a Public Health lens, testing response to a large-scale overdose situation is important. The scenario humanizes the opioid epidemic and provides a realistic opportunity to view how it can touch everyone,” said Ian Reich, public health manager with the Grey Bruce Health Unit. “The lessons learned will enhance our planning moving forward.”

All municipalities in Ontario are required to have an emergency management plan and to test the plan annually. Planning allows municipalities to respond quickly in the event of an emergency and minimize the impact on the affected communities.

For more information about emergency management in Grey County, visit www.grey.ca/emergency-preparedness.

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