Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Mar, 2017 01:32 PM
    VANCOUVER — A group of students at the University of British Columbia have turned to technology in an effort to address the opioid crisis by creating a wearable device they say can detect an overdose.
     
    The six engineering, medical and design students wanted to focus on people who could overdose indoors, where others can't see or help them, said Sampath Satti, a biomedical engineering graduate student.
     
    More than 900 people fatally overdosed across British Columbia last year, many of them victims of the opioid fentanyl. Free kits containing the overdose-reversing drug naloxone are available at hospitals, drop-in centres and shelters as part of an effort to save lives.
     
    But people are still dying.
     
    "The people who have naloxone kits and are trained to use them are not coming in frequent contact with the people who need to use them," Satti said.
     
    The group has created a device that is worn on a person's wrist, with a wire connecting to a sensor on a fingertip, that can detect when a user has stopped moving and breathing.
     
    Satti compared the technology to a wearable fitness tracker that monitors a person's heart rate. The overdose detector would sound an alarm if a person's vital signs fall below a certain threshold, alerting others to a possible overdose so naloxone can be administered.
     
    Through its research, the group has determined there's a window of about five or six minutes between when an overdose is detected and when someone can be saved, Satti said.
     
    So far, team members have been testing the technology on themselves in a lab, and Satti said they're optimistic about the results.
     
    "The detection is actually quite promising. We can get a sufficiently good reading of the breathing rate when it's tested on ourselves."
     
    Next week, they plan to start working with an overdose prevention site in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside to collect more data and see if their methodology can be used reliably outside of a controlled environment.
     
    Eventually, they'd like to create a version of the device that looks like a watch or a fitness tracker, without a fingertip sensor or any additional wires.
     
    Satti said the aim is to produce the gadgets for about $30 each so they could be used at overdose prevention sites or wherever people typically use illicit drugs. The device was created to only monitor vital signs and have no value if it were lost or stolen.
     
    The technology isn't meant to replace other safe drug-consumption practices, he said.
     
    "We don't want this device to give people false confidence to use alone," he said. "We would ideally like this device to work together with other harm-reduction measures."
     
     
    Satti said emergency room doctors, front-line workers and drug users have welcomed the invention.
     
    "I think one of the reasons the response has been positive is that this is one of the first technological approaches towards the opioid process. It piques a lot of interest."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Charges Against Teenaged Motorcyclist In Kamloops After High School Prank Falls Flat

    Charges Against Teenaged Motorcyclist In Kamloops After High School Prank Falls Flat
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — School officials in Kamloops are not laughing about one student's ill-advised prank.

    Charges Against Teenaged Motorcyclist In Kamloops After High School Prank Falls Flat

    Critically Injured Passenger Dies After Small Plane Crashes In B.C. Interior

    Critically Injured Passenger Dies After Small Plane Crashes In B.C. Interior
      Bill Yearwood with the Transportation Safety Board says the light aircraft crashed on landing near Green Lake, east of 70 Mile House. 

    Critically Injured Passenger Dies After Small Plane Crashes In B.C. Interior

    Vancouver Police Issue Policy On How To Interact With Transgender People

    Vancouver Police Issue Policy On How To Interact With Transgender People
    The department says the policy was created with respectful criteria for the identification of trans people and its officers will receive training around the new procedures.

    Vancouver Police Issue Policy On How To Interact With Transgender People

    $900 Million In Public Transit Projects For BC

    $900 Million In Public Transit Projects For BC
    The Government of Canada remains committed to making significant investments in infrastructure that will improve our public transit systems, strengthen Canadian communities, and help grow the economy.

    $900 Million In Public Transit Projects For BC

    3 Suspects Of Sexual Harassment And Assault At Lougheed Skytrain Station Identified

    3 Suspects Of Sexual Harassment And Assault At Lougheed Skytrain Station Identified
    The three men have been interviewed by Metro Vancouver Transit Police. This investigation continues.

    3 Suspects Of Sexual Harassment And Assault At Lougheed Skytrain Station Identified

    Risky Choice: N.W.T. Woman Used Bear To Shake Stalking Wolf In 12-Hour Ordeal

    Risky Choice: N.W.T. Woman Used Bear To Shake Stalking Wolf In 12-Hour Ordeal
    The sound of a mother bear calling for her cub is normally a warning to get the heck out for anyone in the bush.

    Risky Choice: N.W.T. Woman Used Bear To Shake Stalking Wolf In 12-Hour Ordeal