Last spring, the fire department in Surrey teamed up with Vancouver-based software developer GINQO to create a program that tracks overdoses in real-time.
The Surrey Fire Service began using the program last June to help deploy resources more proactively, helping firefighters to potentially save more lives.
Using the program, the department is able to mine data from overdose calls, while looking for patterns or clusters.
The software sends an alert email if overdoses are double or more the average daily rate, more than three overdoses occur within a square kilometre in a four-hour period within one square kilometre, or more than four overdoses occur within the same time period and radius.
The project was created shortly after Surrey firefighters responded to 17 overdoses over a 72-hour period in December 2016.
Throughout 2017, Surrey firefighters responded to an average of 7.5 overdose calls a day.
“With the strain the opioid crisis has put on our first responders, this business tool is helping us and our partners to be in the right place at the right time,” Chief Garis said.
As the opioid crisis continues on, government and public health agencies from across Canada and the United States are looking to Surrey’s overdose-tracking program for a solution.
Shortly after the program was introduced, the city began receiving information and presentations requests.
By August 2017, Surrey had signed an agreement to share information with healthcare service provider Fraser Health. The City was also in discussions about an agreement with Surrey RCMP.
In early December, the City of Surrey announced another data-based initiative, this time partnering with Statistics Canada to collect data that will help to strengthen the city’s response efforts.
The City of Surrey- Statistics Canada Opioid Project is a partnership between the City of Surrey, Statistics Canada, Surrey Fire Service, Surrey RCMP, Fraser Health, and the BC Coroners Service, among others, which will help generate data to identify primary risk factors for individuals at a high-risk for opioid use or overdose.
“With the data that will be collected by this multiagency project we will be able to create more precise interventions to help a population that has been widely impacted by the opioid scourge but little is known about,” Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner said.
Both data-based intervention projects are posed to help Surrey, and other agencies looking to the city, to address the opioid crisis more proactively and with more accurate information.
(RSS generated with FetchRss)
Powered by WPeMatico