LOCAL NEWS, DELIVERED DAILY. Subscribe to our daily news wrap and get the top stories sent straight to your inbox every evening.

Emergency doctors urged to avoid drugs used to ventilate COVID-19 patients

Apr 15, 2020 | 7:57 AM

OTTAWA — The Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians is calling on its doctors to protect the limited supply of certain sedatives and painkillers needed for patients on ventilators.

Putting a patient on an artificial breathing machine, as happens with people severely sick with COVID-19, usually requires a sedative like propofol, and painkillers like fentanyl and morphine.

The association warned Canada could have a critical shortage of those drugs in the coming weeks.

But those drugs are also commonly used in emergency rooms, and the association has urged emergency doctors to consider using alternatives.