Veld Music Festival ramps up safety protocol with life-saving naloxone - Action News
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Toronto

Veld Music Festival ramps up safety protocol with life-saving naloxone

The popular Toronto festival, happening next weekend at Downsview Park, announced that it will allow partiers to bring their own naloxone kits to prevent accidental opioid overdose.

To prevent overdose and overheating, Toronto festival will allow naloxone kits, increase water stations

The Veld Music Festival in Toronto, now in its sixth year, has permitted ticketholders to bring naloxone, an antidote to opioid overdose. (VELD Music Festival)

A Toronto music festival has expanded its safety protocol to allow patrons to bring naloxone, an anti-overdose medication,onto festival grounds.

Veld Music Festival, a two-day event starting August 6 at DownsviewPark, prohibits illegal substances. But after consultations with Toronto Public Health organizers, it will allow ticketholders to carry naloxonewith them.

Veld promoterINK Entertainment said itstill working out the details and declined to comment further on today's announcement.

Other harm-reduction measures include an increased number of water stations, shaded areas and a designated space for women.

Veld also announced that harm-reduction organization TRIP!, whichpromotes safe drug use at festivals, will have outreach workers available to educate those in attendance for the third year in a row.

Naloxoneban overturned

The changes follow an announcement this week by the promoters of WayHome Music and Arts Festival, which backed down on a naloxone ban at the annual event thatwould have prohibited personal kits from being carried.

WayHome, an annual festival near Barrie, Ont.,will now allow festival patrons to exchange naloxone injection kits for a nasal spray.

In an interview with CBC News before the ban was overturned earlier this week, Dr. Adam Lund, WayHome's medical director, defended the decision to allow naloxoneadministration bytrained medics only.

"Naloxoneis not a one-stop solution," he said, explaining that the drug has a finite effect and must be administered correctly.

TRIP! project coordinator Lori Kufnerdisagreeswith WayHome'sinitial policy, adding that the harm-reduction organization believes in widespread access to the medication.

"In order to get the naloxoneyou need to be trained," Kufner said. "So whether it's been picked up at a pharmacy or [it's a]harm-reduction worker whoever has it knows how to use it."

Naloxone temporarily reverses an opioid overdose and can be picked up for free under OHIP at Ontario pharmacies. Naloxone is harmless if administered to someone who hasn't ingested opioids, says TRIP! coordinator Lori Kufner. (Catholic District School Board of Eastern Ontario)

Naloxonetemporarily blocks the effects of opioids such as fentanyl, which can depress breathing and have been found in an array of contaminated substances in Canada.

'People overindulge'

Toronto-area festival veteran Clara Greig says she's been to music festivals like VELD across Canadaand has seen various strategies for harm reduction put into practice.

In an interview with CBC Toronto the 26-year-old recalled her experiences at a B.C. festival six years ago, where friends watched people collapse from taking substances smuggled into the festival.

"One guy came up to us with a Pringles container full of drugs," she said. "MDMA, acid, ketamineyou had access to them."

Greigsays she's seen a change in attitude from festival organizers over the last few years, with promoters placing greater emphasis on harm reduction and safety.

Grieg says, from what she's observed in her years on the festival circuit, it's a change for the better.

"People overindulge. They have misconceptions about safe drug-taking," she said, referring to the need for naloxoneand other harm-reduction measures at festivals.

"One hundred percent, it should be in any bar, any place where people are drinking or doing drugs."

In 2014, two people died at Veld after ingesting drugs and 15 others were hospitalized.

INK Entertainment would not comment on the number of medics supervising this year's festival.

With files from Elise von Scheel