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6 people taken to hospital after high levels of carbon monoxide detected

6 people taken to hospital after high levels of carbon monoxide detected

CTV News18 hours ago

Seven people have been taken to hospital after high levels of carbon monoxide were detected at Boyle Community Centre in London, Ont. June 16, 2025. (Reta Ismail/CTV News London)
The Ministry of Labour has been called in to investigate after high levels of carbon monoxide were detected at Boyle Community Centre on Charlotte Street in London.
Officials at the scene told CTV News everybody has evacuated the building that is currently under construction.
Six people were taken to hospital, all of which were construction workers.
Londoners are reminded to have CO alarms if they have a home with a fuel burning appliance, fire place or attached garage.
This is a developing story. More details to come.
— with files from CTV News London's Reta Ismail

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Drug overdoses in Quebec are on the rise, and the problem could get worse
Drug overdoses in Quebec are on the rise, and the problem could get worse

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Drug overdoses in Quebec are on the rise, and the problem could get worse

This is the first of two articles that will focus on the issue of drug overdoses in Quebec, where the situation is heading and what needs to be done to curb this trend. The 911 caller was in a state of shock. A little after 4 p.m. on Sunday Sept. 10, 2023, the caller stumbled upon a group of five people and most of them, if not all, looked either unconscious or dead. According to Urgences- santé 's call records, the first team of paramedics arrived at the corner of Ontario and St-Dominique streets in downtown Montreal in two minutes and four seconds. At least four more ambulances and two advanced-care emergency vehicles followed soon after. There was also a supervisor on site to help manage the chaos. The final tally: six overdoses — not five — and two of them were fatal. A scene like this one is rare. 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'Not a trajectory that comes down quickly' Larney says Quebec "has largely been sheltered from the worst of the overdose epidemic in Canada." In April 2016, the province of B.C. declared a public health emergency after more than 200 people had died in less than four months. In all of 2017, Quebec recorded 181 cases of people dying after confirmed or suspected drug overdose, according to data from the province's public health institute, the Institut national de santé publique du Québec (INSPQ). In 2018, that total more than doubled, with 424 deaths. The next significant spike came after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. At first glance, the death tolls in Quebec pale in comparison to the ones in provinces like B.C. and Alberta. But fatal drug overdoses are trending downward across much of North America while Quebec is heading in the opposite direction. "We've seen from those other provinces that this is not a trajectory that comes down quickly," said Larney, who co-authored a 2024 study that looked into whether Quebec had entered a new era of drug-related deaths. Larney acknowledged the reasons behind the increase in deaths in Quebec can be difficult to pinpoint. She said drugs like fentanyl appear to have travelled from west to east since the start of the pandemic, enabling different drug-trafficking players to get involved. As the number of drug overdose deaths in the province increased, so has the number of emergency room visits for patients who appeared to have consumed opioids. According to INSPQ data, the total in 2016 was 1,095. In 2024, it was 1,954. The portrait has changed Experts have remarked that the pandemic caused borders to shut down, meaning there were less drugs coming in, including the cocaine necessary to produce crack. 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New medical clinic, 10 doctors coming to Langford

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