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B.C.’s overdose crisis is taking its toll on paramedics

File photo. File / Global News

The drug overdose crisis is taking a deep psychological toll on paramedics — so much so, that they say they have “compassion fatigue.”

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The feeling occurs “where it just gets too hard to keep the drive going and the compassion going in these situations,” BC Emergency Health Services executive vice-president Linda Lupini explained.

LISTEN: Overdose crisis taking a toll on paramedics, with Jon McComb 
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Lupini said “resiliency” course is being offered across the province.

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It’s taught by a psychologist who is a specialist in dealing with first responders.

“We had very, very good feedback that paramedics and dispatchers feel very differently when they walk out they can deal with a lot of feelings around this crisis,” Lupini said.

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She said that attending numerous overdoses in a single day can weigh a paramedic down.

“You kind of wonder are we doing the right thing and is this ever going to end?” Lupini said.

B.C. ambulance paramedics have responded to a staggering 36,000 drug overdose calls in the last 20 months.

WATCH: Trying to solve the opioid crisis

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