“i was gravely disappointed,” he said. “when they mandated (these changes), there was no funding. and they made that very clear.”
zhang and his friends have raised nearly $14,000 to help his vancouver school buy aeds. zhang said being part of the solution made him feel like he and his friends accomplished something important.
vancouver school board chair victoria jung and trustee janet fraser (left), and trustees suzie mah and christopher richardson (right) with the point grey students, including tobias zhang (third from right), who fundraised nearly $14,000 for aeds. credit: tobias zhang
while cpr and aed training are meaningful skills, what is more relevant to young people is giving them naloxone kits and training to use them, added richardson, who is a special constable with the vancouver police.
“having free and easy access to nasal naloxone would improve intervention outcomes even more,” agreed starko, sidney’s father.
“and we hope for increased government action against import of unregulated drugs and their component chemicals.”
b.c.’s toxic drug crisis has claimed more than 16,000 lives since it was declared a provincial health emergency in 2016.
when sidney overdosed in a uvic residence, student witnesses immediately called 911 and campus security, who have first aid training. but she died of oxygen deprivation after not getting naloxone for 13 minutes and cpr for 15 minutes.
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new to b.c.'s school curriculum this fall: cpr, naloxone, cardiac arrest devices