Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Health Canada Moves To Restrict Chemicals Used To Make Deadly Drug Fentanyl

The Canadian Press, 01 Dec, 2016 11:22 AM
    OTTAWA — The Canadian government is moving to control six chemicals used to make the deadly opioid fentanyl in an effort to contain the growing overdose death toll.
     
     
    Health Canada announced Wednesday that the new regulations will take place immediately because of the urgency of the fentanyl crisis, resulting in hundreds of fatalities across the country this year.
     
    Health Minister Jane Philpott says regulating some of the precursors used to make the synthetic drug is among a range of steps the government is taking.
     
    Philpott says its actions will also help police intervene in the movement of the chemicals used to make the illicit substance.
     
    RCMP announced last week that it had reached an agreement with China to try to stop the flow of fentanyl into Canada.
     
     
    British Columbia declared a public health emergency in April but the death toll keeps rising, with 622 fatalities counted between January and October, about 60 per cent of them involving fentanyl.
     
    Philpott says the government is moving quickly to reduce the supply of illicit fentanyl, although there is much more urgent work to be done.
     
    "There are deaths virtually every single day as a result of opioid overdoses. And some of those, in fact increasing numbers of those, are associated with illicit substances including, of course, fentanyl," she told reporters in Ottawa.
     
    Philpott held a two-day summit earlier this month with health experts and ministers to examine a national approach to addiction, overdoses and deaths related to opioid use.
     
    "We hope that this will support our colleagues as they try to make sure these substances are not being (made)  available and lives will be saved as a result," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No Charges Against Quebec Police Accused Of Abusing Native Women: Reports

    No Charges Against Quebec Police Accused Of Abusing Native Women: Reports
    MONTREAL — Crown officials will not lay charges against Quebec provincial police in the alleged sexual abuse of indigenous women, various media reported Tuesday.

    No Charges Against Quebec Police Accused Of Abusing Native Women: Reports

    Finding Van Gogh: Douglas Coupland Locates Lookalike To Be Featured In Art Piece

    Finding Van Gogh: Douglas Coupland Locates Lookalike To Be Featured In Art Piece
    VANCOUVER — A British man bearing a striking resemblance to Vincent van Gogh is the muse for a new work of art by Douglas Coupland.

    Finding Van Gogh: Douglas Coupland Locates Lookalike To Be Featured In Art Piece

    Latest Drug Overdoses In Winnipeg May Be Fentanyl-Related: Police

    Latest Drug Overdoses In Winnipeg May Be Fentanyl-Related: Police
    WINNIPEG — Police in Winnipeg say three people who died of a drug overdose may be the latest victims of a rise in the use of fentanyl.

    Latest Drug Overdoses In Winnipeg May Be Fentanyl-Related: Police

    13 Canadians Admitted To Hospital Daily In 2014-15 For Opioid Overdose: Report

    13 Canadians Admitted To Hospital Daily In 2014-15 For Opioid Overdose: Report
    TORONTO — An analysis of opioid overdoses in 2014-15 found 13 Canadians per day were hospitalized after taking pain-killing opioid medications like oxycodone and morphine.

    13 Canadians Admitted To Hospital Daily In 2014-15 For Opioid Overdose: Report

    Canadian Kids Rank Low In Global Study Of Physical Activity

    Canadian Kids Rank Low In Global Study Of Physical Activity
    TORONTO — It's well-established that Canadian children are not as active as they could be. Now a new study suggests they may be among the least active kids in the world.

    Canadian Kids Rank Low In Global Study Of Physical Activity

    Former New Brunswick Youth Advocate, Politician, Picked As B.C.'s New Child Rep

    Former New Brunswick Youth Advocate, Politician, Picked As B.C.'s New Child Rep
    Bernard Richard, 65, was recommended Tuesday to take over the job by an all-party government committee searching to replace Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond who held the position for a decade.

    Former New Brunswick Youth Advocate, Politician, Picked As B.C.'s New Child Rep