The DPS Department of Safety, officers with the Denver Police Department as well as paramedics were responding to the high school located on Lamar Street near the intersection of W. Darmouth Ave. at around 9 a.m. on reports of a medical emergency “related to some sort of overdose of a drug,” said DPS spokesman Will Jones.
Scott Pribble, the director of external communications for DPS, told Denver7 that the medical emergency was an isolated incident involving five students who were in the parking lot of the school. One of the students was taken to a local hospital for treatment and three others were released to their parents, Pribble said. The status of fifth student was unclear, he added. No other students at the school were impacted.Back in October, Denver Public Schools began providing naloxone, a medicine that reverses opioid overdoses, and officials began training nurses in the district’s middle and high schools.
The Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment told Denver7 as of October 1, DPS is one of 70 school districts requesting naloxone kits from the state's Naloxone Bulk Purchase Fund. Of those 70 districts, CDPHE said 26 districts had received kits.
UPDATE: A student was hospitalized and three were released to their parents after an emergency involving a suspected drug overdose at JFK High School in Denver, according to district officials. No other students at the school were impacted.
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