Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jan 2017
Source: Fresno Bee, The (CA)
Copyright: 2017 The Fresno Bee
Contact:  http://www.fresnobee.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/161
Note: Does not publish letters from outside their circulation area.

WITH POT LEGALIZED, CARTELS TURN TO PUSHING DEADLY FENTANYL

It was March when fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 100 times more powerful
than morphine, insinuated itself into Sacramento County. In a matter of
weeks, dozens of people overdosed. The drug killed 12 people, including
Jerome Butler, a 28-year-old father of three young children.

"We have lost so many of our kids behind this pill," Butler's mother,
Natasha Butler, said at the time. "All the parents that (have) lost their
kids behind this, we have to stand together. We have to get it stopped."

Then, in April, fentanyl formally introduced itself to the world.

Prince was found dead, slumped in an elevator one morning at his Minnesota
home and recording studio, Paisley Park. The musician had overdosed on a
powerful opioid just days before, we soon found out, and he had reached
out for help to rid himself of addiction. It just came too late.

It's not surprising then that, now in 2017, fentanyl is one of the
deadliest drugs plaguing the country. This scourge is something Congress
and a soon-to-be-inaugurated President-elect Donald Trump can't afford to
ignore.

"Opioids such as heroin and fentanyl -- and diverted prescription pain
pills -- are killing people in this country at a horrifying rate," Chuck
Rosenberg, acting administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration,
said in a statement accompanying the agency's annual Drug Threat
Assessment report. "We face a public health crisis of historic
proportions."

Cities as disparate as Milwaukee, Cleveland and Long Island, N.Y., all
reported sky-high numbers of overdoses for 2016. In New York, overdose
killed more than 1,000 people -- the first four-digit death total in the
city's history, The New York Times reported. Almost half of the deaths
since July involved fentanyl.

Nationally, the picture is even more bleak, and going back further than
many would've imagined. Using a new method to examine data, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention and Food and Drug Administration found
that the number of deaths from fentanyl more than doubled from 2013 to
2014 to 4,200 people.

Heroin still kills far more Americans than fentanyl, but what's alarming
is the rapid increase in the number of users. The drug is so powerful that
addicts can die of an overdose within minutes, and emergency responders
sent to save them can die of exposure within minutes, too.

Legit fentanyl is often prescribed to cancer patients in transdermal
patches or lozenges. It's also used as an anesthetic for surgery.

But now Mexican drug cartels have gotten in on the action. As the demand
for cheap marijuana has waned with legalization in California and other
states, they've looked to the millions who are addicted to opioids to make
a profit.

The number of deaths from fentanyl more than doubled between 2013 and 2014
to 4,200 people.

The cartels smuggle ingredients from China and concoct synthetic fentanyl
in illicit laboratories. Sometimes they mix it with other drugs, such as
heroin, before pushing it to American streets. Sometimes it's pressed into
counterfeit prescription pills, such as the painkiller Norco that Butler
thought he was taking.

Reversing this trend will take work on many fronts. It should include a
crackdown on drug smugglers from Mexico, as Trump has vowed to do, but
also more access to addiction treatment services to end the cycle for
good.

Fentanyl is far too dangerous and far too insidious to ignore.
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