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Tag: Overdose Prevention

  • Denver Health sharing patients’ stories to ease stigma of fentanyl use

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    DENVER — Denver Health is sharing the stories of patients and support specialists to ease the stigma surrounding fentanyl use and, in turn, reduce overdose deaths.

    According to data from the Denver Department of Public Health & Environment (DDPHE), as of July 10, there have been 320 confirmed overdose deaths so far this year. Of those, 213 cases involved fentanyl.

    During the same period last year (Jan. 1 through July 10, 2024), there were 275 confirmed overdose deaths in Denver.

    Denver Department of Public Health & Environment (DDPHE)

    “Really, the age range is everything from 9 years old to 90. That is not an exaggeration, we have patients at either end of the spectrum,” Sarah Christensen, medical director of outpatient substance use disorders at Denver Health, said about the patients she sees who have been impacted by fentanyl. “They’re a variety of backgrounds. No one is immune; no one is protected. Coming from a good family or having money doesn’t stop you from experiencing this.”

    Denver Health’s Center for Addiction Medicine helps people navigate recovery. Outside of the building are rows of small purple windmills, recognizing the lives lost to substance abuse.

    Denver Health's Center for Addiction Medicine windmills

    Denver7

    Christensen said the community, whether they’re impacted by substance use disorder or not, can help reduce overdose deaths through awareness and empathy. She recommends that people carry naloxone so they can intervene if they see someone experiencing an overdose.

    “I recommend to everybody to have that with you,” said Christensen. “Actually, I have it with me in my purse.”

    Naloxone, also known by the brand name NARCAN, is a medication that can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose and can be given as a nasal spray or an injection. The medication is safe and easy to use, not only by trained professionals but also by bystanders.

    Nasal spray naloxone is available at pharmacies or through various vending machines and resource centers across Denver.

    “An overdose might mean that someone has taken so much that they are no longer conscious,” Chistensen said. “What we really worry about is when they stop breathing.”

    • Denver Health created a video demonstrating how to administer naloxone. You can watch it in the video player below

    If your loved one is experiencing substance use disorder, Christensen said the best way to approach the situation is with compassion.

    “Being able to say, ‘Whatever’s happening, I love you, I’m still going to love you, and I’m here when you’re ready and I would love for you to get help,’” she said.

    In an effort to reduce the stigma surrounding fentanyl use, Denver Health is highlighting the stories of people impacted by opioids and overdoses through an exhibit titled “Stories in Black and White.”

    According to Denver Health, “patients, peer support specialists, and advisory members for the Center for Addiction Medicine’s Community Advisory Meeting shared these stories in partnership with the CDC Foundation’s Overdose Response Strategy Program.”

    Denver Health "Stories in Black and White."

    Denver7

    “We hope these stories encourage more dialogue and less stigma about how people from all walks of life can get the support they need when they are ready,” Denver Health wrote.

    The exhibit will be at Civic Center Park near Broadway and 14th Avenue on Sept. 1 between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. It will then be showcased at the Denver Central Public Library on Sept. 4 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

    You can learn more about the exhibit through this link.


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  • Orange County overdose prevention program aims to save lives, one fentanyl test strip at a time

    Orange County overdose prevention program aims to save lives, one fentanyl test strip at a time

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    click to enlarge

    Courtesy of Largest Heart

    Nonprofit Largest Heart distributes fentanyl test strips in Orange County to help prevent accidental overdose.

    When Peter Cook was in the throes of alcoholism seven years ago, he didn’t imagine he would eventually work to help others who similarly lived and suffered from addiction. In 2017, Peter’s brother Andrew gave him the push and resources he needed to get help and begin his path towards recovery.

    Just weeks after, however, Andrew unexpectedly passed away in southern Chile, while on vacation. According to his obituary, Andrew was just 39 years old, a “dedicated Christian” and an English teacher.

    For Peter, a resident of Winter Garden, his brother’s sudden passing was a tragedy that led him to where he is today, working by day as the Director of Business Development for Central Florida Behavioral Hospital and as head of a local nonprofit. “Where passion meets purpose,” he told Orlando Weekly.

    On his brother’s birthday, in August 2018, Cook officially formed his local nonprofit organization, Largest Heart, a grassroots harm reduction project. Cook “literally Googled ‘how to start a nonprofit,’” he admitted sheepishly, but also with pride.

    Earlier this year, Largest Heart was one of two organizations, along with Project Opioid, that was chosen by the Orange County government to lead a new effort to prevent accidental drug overdose.

    Over the last decade, fatal drug overdoses in the county have surged more than 250 percent, from 175 deaths in 2014 to roughly 450 last year. A majority are tied to illicit forms of the opioid fentanyl, which is largely coming from U.S. citizens (not migrants) smuggling it across legal points of entry at the U.S. Southern Border, according to immigration authorities.

    The idea of Largest Heart’s project, called “Test Before You Try,” is to expand access to fentanyl test strips: small, inexpensive paper strips that can tell you whether there is fentanyl in your drugs. They’re simple to use, about 96 to 100 percent accurate when used correctly, and can save lives.

    Until last year, these strips were technically illegal to have, sell or give away in Florida, simply due to being classified under old state statutes as “drug paraphernalia.” State lawmakers in Florida, and over two dozen other states with similar statutes on the books, however, have altered their state laws on paraphernalia in recent years to change that.

    So far, Largest Heart has distributed over 38,000 fentanyl testing kits throughout the county, which (thanks to a partnership with DanceSafe) contain testing strips as well as instructions for how to use them.

    Cook stressed that distributing these kits is not a push to use drugs — “We don’t encourage drug use,” he affirmed — but to make sure that if you, a friend or a roommate does use, they’re doing so safely, without risking their life. “It’s an empowerment program,” he explained.

    Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid up to 50 times more potent than the illicit opioid heroin, has driven the country’s overdose crisis in recent years, killing nearly 75,000 people in the U.S. last year alone.

    It can happen to anyone

    What’s most dangerous about this potent drug is where it’s being found. Lab testing from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) found that 7 out of every 10 counterfeit pills they seized last year contained a lethal dose of fentanyl.

    Just two milligrams, comparable to just a few grains of table salt, can be deadly. And it’s been found laced into a wide range of illegally produced drugs, including drugs like cocaine, meth, fake pills marketed by dealers under different names, and unregulated forms of marijuana.

    What Largest Heart is attempting to do is “not condemning somebody for making a bad decision,” said Cook, referring to illicit drug use, “but educating them.” Making sure that if someone does choose to take a pill at a party or smoke a blunt, they’re not unknowingly putting their life on the line. Substance use experts have warned that you don’t have to have a drug addiction or even regularly use drugs in order to accidentally lose your life.

    You can be a teenager or college student who, facing peer pressure, takes a pill someone hands you at a party. You’re told it’s Xanax — a central nervous system depressant commonly prescribed for anxiety — but it’s not. You don’t know this, of course, so you take the pill. Your limbs become heavy. Your face becomes clammy, pale or ashen. Your breathing slows, then stops. You lose consciousness. And you never wake up.

    It’s not just a Lifetime movie or some D.A.R.E ad. It’s an actual horror story playing out across the country, quietly devastating parents, friends and communities. Although drug use among youth, specifically, has declined in recent years, teen overdose rates have surged. Counterfeit prescription pills containing fentanyl are believed to be a contributing cause.

    Although drug use among youth has declined in recent years, teen overdose rates have surged.

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    According to data from the Orange County Medical Examiner’s Office, reviewed by Orlando Weekly, at least four teenagers in Orange and Osceola Counties have died of drug overdose this year alone. All four deaths involved fentanyl, and were marked as accidental deaths. In total, the office has identified 263 drug-involved deaths in Orange and Osceola counties this year so far, with fentanyl specifically involved in the vast majority.

    “Anytime somebody buys a pill off the street, they should assume it’s more likely that it’s contaminated with fentanyl,” Dr. Thomas Hall, director of the Orange County Office for a Drug-Free Community, told Orlando Weekly earlier this year.

    Several adults who died of fatal drug overdose this year were identified by the Medical Examiner’s Office as “transient,” meaning they were homeless. But the vast majority of people who died had a listed home address.

    Overdose deaths surged dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic, as people found themselves cut off from others, struggling with mental health, and more vulnerable to using drugs and alcohol to cope. Those who used drugs were also more likely to use them alone, and therefore did not have someone around to call 911 or administer Narcan (a life-saving opioid overdose reversal drug) if they collapsed.

    In Orange County, drug overdose deaths reached their peak in 2021. More than 500 people died of drug overdose that year, up from 172 deaths in 2014 and 342 deaths in 2019. The number of fatal overdoses has declined some since, with a slight increase documented last year, but the number of lives lost has remained above pre-pandemic levels.

    “We’ve never seen anything like it,” said Cook. “We’re gonna lose a generation of kids to deadly fentanyl.”

    A community effort

    The fentanyl test strip distribution effort led by Cook’s nonprofit Largest Heart is being funded by a small portion of what Orange County has received so far through national settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors.

    Altogether, the county will receive an estimated $60 million payout from those settlements, distributed over the next 15 to 18 years. The county has already earmarked funds for projects such as overdose awareness campaigns for adults and youth, a mobile medication-assisted treatment clinic for opioid addiction (expected to launch next month), and a new addiction treatment program that just launched this month in Parramore for uninsured residents.

    Project Opioid, an Orlando-based profit also focused on reducing overdose deaths, has also received funds to distribute fentanyl test strips. They’re focusing on passing out fentanyl test strips downtown outside nightclubs and bars on the weekends.

    Largest Heart’s program has been approved for $61,000 in funding, according to Cook, which comes through reimbursement from the county. “Largest Heart pays for this all upfront,” said Cook, who admitted they’re operating “on a shoestring budget.”

    Since March, Largest Heart has been passing out fentanyl test strip kits at community events, including 8,000 at Orlando’s Juneteenth Celebration, and has also given them away to local businesses or organizations that ask, such as food pantries and the LGBT+ Center Orlando.

    It’s become a community effort. Park Ave CDs, one of Orlando’s most beloved indie music retailers, has been “one of our best community partners,” Cook gushed. “They are so about protecting and loving on this community in Orlando. It’s absolutely amazing.”

    click to enlarge An Instagram post from Park Ave CDs promoting harm reduction supplies the store gives out to help keep the community safe. - Park Ave CDS/Instagram

    Park Ave CDS/Instagram

    An Instagram post from Park Ave CDs promoting harm reduction supplies the store gives out to help keep the community safe.

    Another surprise: “Law enforcement loves them,” he added. The library system is also interested in getting kits to pass out, and local schools, grappling with their own role in preventing accidental overdose among students, have also shown interest. “We had elementary schools requesting these,” Cook said.

    Not having an advertising budget for Test Before You Try, he admitted, is one of their biggest challenges in spreading the word. In addition to fentanyl test strips, they’ve also distributed Narcan, the opioid overdose reversal medication. Narcan, or its generic version naloxone, can be purchased from places like Publix, or you can get it for free at different access sites throughout the state, or request it via mail.

    Beyond distribution, the idea is to reduce stigma and create openings for conversations about drug use and harm reduction. It could ultimately be a cost-saving effort, too. When or if someone overdoses, the ambulance costs, healthcare costs and other criminal justice system costs can add up for communities.

    Similarly, drug addiction can result in lost productivity, health conditions and reduced quality of life, and becomes more costly to treat as conditions become more severe or chronic. Nationally, fatal opioid overdose can cost hundreds of billions of dollars each year, research has found, while treatment for addiction and harm reduction strategies such as fentanyl test strips can be more cost-effective.

    Cook’s organization recently secured an agreement with Volusia County to expand their fentanyl test strip distribution there. He’s currently in talks with the Osceola County government as well, saying, “My goal is to take this statewide.”

    He’s been speaking with state legislators in the area who might be interested in sponsoring a request for state funds. One of them is Democratic Sen. Geraldine Thompson, who hosted the city’s Juneteenth celebration in Orlando. A legislative aide for Thompson confirmed the senator is considering the request, but has not yet made a decision on whether to sponsor.

    Cook admitted, due to stigma, sometimes you have to craft your pitch for fentanyl test strip kits on the fly, depending on who you’re talking to. But it’s not always hard. Cook said one grandmother came up to him at an event his nonprofit attended and cried on his shoulder, thanking him for his work. Her teenage grandson had died, he recalled, after smoking marijuana laced with fentanyl.

    For a young person headed to college who doesn’t use drugs, and doesn’t plan to, he explains to them, “This isn’t for you. This is for your roommate.” For parents, he tells them, “Like, I know your kid’s never gonna smoke weed, but if they do, here you go.”

    Ultimately, it’s laying out the stakes: Thousands of people die of accidental overdose each year. And you never know who could be next.

    click to enlarge Florida Sen. Tina Polsky hugging Democratic colleague Sen. Lori Berman after a bill to decriminalize fentanyl testing equipment passes on March 29, 2023. - The Florida Channel

    The Florida Channel

    Florida Sen. Tina Polsky hugging Democratic colleague Sen. Lori Berman after a bill to decriminalize fentanyl testing equipment passes on March 29, 2023.

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • Department of Defense To Track Military Overdoses, Provide NARCAN | High Times

    Department of Defense To Track Military Overdoses, Provide NARCAN | High Times

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    As per a new law, the Department of Defense will begin tracking overdoses within the United States military in 2024 and begin to provide naloxone to service members beginning in 2025. 

    Military overdose deaths have historically not been systematically tracked until the release of a report by Rolling Stone in 2022 detailing the steep rise in overdose deaths at Fort Bragg, which has since been renamed to Fort Liberty. The report detailed the shocking increase in deaths from fentanyl, counterfeit prescription pills laced with fentanyl and deaths in otherwise healthy young men from causes typically sustained from long-term drug use that were not labeled as overdoses.

    In general, Rolling Stone described shoddy record-keeping and experienced a general lack of transparency from the brass at Fort Liberty regarding drug use, drug-related crimes or overdose by military members. Of the 109 deaths that occurred at Fort Liberty between 2020 and 2021, at least 14 soldiers died directly from overdose, though that number is likely higher if you count deaths from drug-related causes, 21 by Rolling Stone’s count, making accidental overdose the leading cause of death at Fort Liberty behind suicide which claimed the lives of 41 soldiers in the same time period. 

    After the Rolling Stone report, pressure built on Congress to do something about the issue and Senator Edward Markey (D-Mass.) along with other congressmen began to push the Pentagon for increased transparency. This request led to an admission by the Pentagon that fentanyl-related deaths roughly doubled among military members between 2017 and 2021, much like the rest of the country experienced. According to a Military.com report, 330 service members died from drug overdose between 2017 and 2022, and 15,000 soldiers experienced non-fatal overdoses in the same time frame. 

    “Real security means guaranteeing that members of the military and their families can get resources and life-saving treatment necessary to stop the overdose crisis in its tracks,” Senator Markey said in a statement to Military.com.

    The law requiring overdose tracking and NARCAN distribution was signed by President Biden in December of 2022 and goes into effect in 2024. According to Military.com, the Department of Defense will be required to submit an annual report on overdose deaths, overdose locations, demographics, whether the service member had previously sought mental health treatment, or if they’d previously been prescribed opioids, benzodiazepines or stimulants.

    “It’s really just smart public health,” said Professor Alex Bennett to Military.com. Bennett serves as the director of New York University’s Opioid Overdose Prevention Program. “There’s really a lot of drug naivete amongst military personnel,” Bennett said.

    Part of the issue, as is the same with the civilian population, is that fentanyl is often used to make “pressed pills” or fake prescription pills designed to look like pharmaceutical painkillers or benzodiazepines which are often poorly dosed, causing people to unwittingly ingest a lethal dose of fentanyl. The Drug Enforcement Administration has estimated that about 70% of fake prescription pills contain a potentially lethal dose of fentanyl. 

    “We’ve been working with a lot of veterans who use substances while they’re in the military. Transparency with data tracking like the kind the military is set to begin doing is a step in the right direction,” Bennett said. “Closing your eyes to drug problems doesn’t solve anything,” Bennett said. “It just makes things worse.”

    Carole De Nola, whose 23-year-old child died of an overdose while stationed at Fort Liberty, told Military.com that drug education is especially needed among military members as the new law does not require the military to educate service members on the dangers of fentanyl.

    “We should be dealing with this before a service member’s about to overdose,” De Nola said. 

    It was not immediately clear how the military would be distributing naloxone, commonly known as NARCAN, which is a life-saving medication that can halt an opioid overdose in its tracks. Many NARCAN distribution programs have been established at the level of local cities and townships but nothing has been established federally, or by military leadership until the new law was passed. The new law requires that naloxone be made available to all troops by the year 2025. The law also requires all the naloxone distributed by tracked, which could discourage some military members from seeking it out. 

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    Patrick Maravelias

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