Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Warning In Interior B.C. About 'Trippy' Drug Linked To 'Zombie' Outbreak In U.S.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Apr, 2019 05:56 PM
  • Warning In Interior B.C. About 'Trippy' Drug Linked To 'Zombie' Outbreak In U.S.

KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The British Columbia Interior Health authority is warning street-drug users of a synthetic cannabinoid that has been linked to a so-called "zombie" outbreak in New York.


Chief medical health officer Dr. Trevor Corneil says tests at a Kamloops overdose-prevention site found the powerful drug mixed with heroin, fentanyl and caffeine.


The authority warns that users can look like they have overdosed on opioids, but they won't respond to naloxone and they can experience "speedy" or "trippy" symptoms with possible hallucinations.


A 2017 article in the New England Journal of Medicine says the drug caused a mass intoxication of 33 people in New York City in July 2016 and was described in the media as a "zombie" outbreak because of the appearance of those who took the drug.


The journal article says the drug was developed by Pfizer in 2009 and it is a strong depressant, which accounts for the "zombie-like" behaviour reported in New York.


Corneil says they don't like to use the zombie term because it can give people the wrong impression and what is important is they exercise caution when new substances come on the black market.


Corneil says they aren't aware of any deaths where the cannabinoid is the only substance.


"Often overdose deaths are caused by a mix of different substance together and we're not seeing any increase in overdose deaths related to this substance, relative to the impact of fentanyl, which is the major toxin we have in our drug supply right now."


Corneil says the discovery of the drug is a good example of the level of sophistication that both harm-reduction workers and users have been able to access in the province.


"This is the problem with criminalization, in that it takes away any of the safeguards that the system puts in place to ensure that people get the product they think they're buying and it hasn't been mixed with something else."


He says workers are seeing that users are becoming more aware that they need to have their illicit drugs tested and when they learn what's in their drugs, they make better decisions.


The testing machines at safe consumption sites look at a large database of drugs, which Corneil says is used for both research and by police.


"Many of them are unusual and rare and we're finding that manufacturers and suppliers are trying different new substances all the time ... trying to make a buck off people who are quite marginalized by the criminalized setting around them."

MORE National ARTICLES

Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study

Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study
"It's go hard or go home," said Rob Serrouya, a University of Alberta biologist and lead author of the study released Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study

Ottawa Professor Who Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash Remembered For Public Outreach

Ottawa professor Pius Adesanmi, one of the 18 Canadians killed in Sunday's Ethiopian Airlines crash, is being remembered as a public intellectual whose outreach to Africans across the glob

Ottawa Professor Who Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash Remembered For Public Outreach

Utah Plaintiffs Seek To Force Omar Khadr To Answer Their Questions

Relatives looking to collect on an American lawsuit against Omar Khadr are asking a Canadian court to force the former Guantanamo Bay prisoner

Utah Plaintiffs Seek To Force Omar Khadr To Answer Their Questions

Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man
CHILLIWACK, B.C. — Police detectives have identified a man who was shot and killed in Chilliwack, B.C., on the weekend.

Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

Canadians Swamp Airlines With Safety Concerns Around Boeing 737 Following Crash

Canadians Swamp Airlines With Safety Concerns Around Boeing 737 Following Crash
Canada's major airlines are being inundated on social media with questions about the safety of their fleet in the wake of the fatal Ethiopian Airlines crash on Sunday.

Canadians Swamp Airlines With Safety Concerns Around Boeing 737 Following Crash

Ethiopian Airlines Crash: Canadians Mourn As Victims Identified

A mother and daughter from Edmonton, a renowned Carleton University professor and an accountant with the City of Calgary were among the 18 Canadians who died Sunday when an Ethiopian Airlines plane crashed

Ethiopian Airlines Crash: Canadians Mourn As Victims Identified