Saturday, June 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Nurse Practitioner Sets Up Easy Access Auto Injectors To Help With Severe Allergic Reactions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Sep, 2015 11:07 AM
    SUSSEX, N.B. — A nurse practitioner hopes to prevent needless deaths from severe allergic reactions by installing publicly accessible auto injectors of epinephrine in prominent locations in Sussex, N.B.
     
    Kelly Dunfield, 51, and her son Robert Dunfield, a 22-year-old medical student, have already arranged for the installation of 30 cabinets with two auto injectors of the medicine — one for a child and one for an adult — in 24 locations ranging from golf courses to fire stations.
     
    She says the program was inspired by the increasing use of publicly accessible defibrillators, which have saved the lives of people who suffer sudden heart attacks.
     
    Dunfield also wants to help prevent deaths by anaphylaxis like the one that took the life of 14-year-old Caroline Lorette, who died last year in Rothesay, N.B., from a reaction to a dairy product.
     
    The funding for the cabinets was provided by a local foundation, while the Allerject units in the pilot project were provided by Sanofi. Sites that take the units sign agreements to resupply the medicine when it expires.
     
    "We would like to see these spread across the country the way the automated external defibrillators have," Dunfield said in a telephone interview.
     
    The boxes include instructions on how to use the auto injectors, she added.
     
    High school teacher Shauna Betts, who lives in Sussex, said educators are pleased to have the brightly coloured boxes in their school.
     
    Some students with severe allergies may forget their auto injectors at home or may not purchase an injector due to financial constraints, she said.
     
    "Now everybody will know where it is. In the past you had to go to the (school) office and see if someone has one," she said in a telephone interview.
     
    Dunfield said nobody in the community of 35,000 has had to use one of the Allerject units so far.
     
    A mall in Hamilton launched a pilot project last year to help make sure epinephrine auto injectors are readily available. The project at the Jackson Square Mall was inspired by the death of a 12-year-old girl who died from an allergic reaction last year at a mall in nearby Burlington, Ont., after eating an ice cream cone.
     
    Dunfield said she has received inquiries about extending the program into other communities and no one has tampered with the boxes in Sussex.
     
    "We've had no issues of vandalism to date," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding

    Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding
    KASHECHEWAN, Ont. — The evacuation of a remote northern Ontario First Nation has begun as the rapidly rising Albany River threatens the community.

    Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding

    Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget

    Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget
    TORONTO — Sales of Crown assets to pay for billions of dollars in new transit and infrastructure projects will be a key focus of today's Ontario budget, also expected to include details on a new provincial pension plan.

    Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget

    Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species

    Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species
    Scientists have sequenced the near-complete genomes of two woolly mammoths that lived 40,000 years apart in different areas of Siberia, providing new insights into the species' evolution and eventual extinction at the close of the Ice Age.

    Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species

    Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder

    Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder
    Miriam Saunders says she's been overwhelmed with grief since the slaying last year of her daughter Loretta, but the Inuit woman from Labrador says she still plans to continue her daughter's work as an advocate for murdered and missing aboriginal women.

    Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder

    Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash

    Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash
    Halifax Stanfield International Airport says antenna array damaged by the crash of the Air Canada flight has been completed and runway approach lights have also been repaired.

    Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash

    Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue

    Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue
    OTTAWA — The minutiae of Mike Duffy's contractual paperwork continues to hold the spotlight at the suspended senator's fraud trial.

    Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue