Politics & Government
Fentanyl Deaths In Santa Clara County Rise During Pandemic
The number of fatal fentanyl and the pandemic are intricately linked.

June 21, 2021
The number of fatal fentanyl overdoses in Santa Clara County nearly tripled during the pandemic, and experts say the two are intricately linked.
Find out what's happening in Campbellfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
ā(The pandemic) seems to have exacerbated a lot of latent trauma that our clients have,ā said Gary Montrezza, CEO of Pathway Society, a substance abuse counseling center based in San Jose. āThose who are already under a lot of trauma and stress just see this as one more brick on their back, of one whose back is already breaking.ā
Last year, 86 people died from fentanyl overdoses in Santa Clara County, with most deaths occurring in young adults in their 20s and 30s. Twenty nine people died from fentanyl in the county in 2019, a marked increase from the 17 who died in 2018.
Find out what's happening in Campbellfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
These numbers make fentanyl the deadliest drug in Santa Clara County, according to officials in the countyās Behavioral Health Department.
āFentanyl is the most dangerous and can kill in a matter of minutes,ā the department wrote in an email to San JosĆ© Spotlight. āExposure to even small amounts can cause overdose and death.ā
Though Santa Clara Countyās number of fentanyl deaths rose during the pandemic, the county still falls short of San Francisco which saw 500 residents die from fentanyl overdoses in 2020, according to a report from the countyās chief medical examiner.
Nationally, deaths from synthetic opioids like fentanyl have increased by 38.4% between 2019 and 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Fentanyl also contributes to overdose deaths from stimulants like cocaine and methamphetamine, according to the CDC.
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid similar to morphine used to treat severe pain after surgery. The drug is 80-100 times more potent than morphine, and just a quarter of a milligram can be fatal.

Fentanyl is often mixed with other drugs, including heroin, according to Dr. Christian OāNeil, medical director at Pathway Society.
āThe rate of dealers cutting their heroin with fentanyl, because itās so much cheaper, is extremely high,ā OāNeil said. āFor people using heroin on the street, thereās an extremely high likelihood that they could also get fentanyl.ā
However, fentanyl is also used along with non-opioids. In fatal fentanyl overdoses, the drug has been detected alongside methamphetamine, cocaine, alcohol and benzodiazepines, according to Dr. Michelle Jordan, Santa Clara Countyās chief medical examiner-coroner.
OāNeil said heās treated patients who have only taken methamphetamine, but whose symptoms resemble opioid withdrawal. While fentanyl is the drug of choice of some addicts, other drugs sold on the street are contaminated with the synthetic opioid.
āA long time ago, it was almost an urban myth about drugs contaminated with this or that,ā OāNeil said. āI just never bought into that before⦠But itās a reality now, and itās driven by profit because itās so much cheaper than pure heroin.ā
Dr. Aimee Moulin, an emergency physician at UC Davis who specializes in behavioral health, said California is traditionally warmer to stimulants such as methamphetamine. However, many addicts have shifted to using a combination of meth and opioids.
Moulin said fentanyl became popular on the East Coast, but started growing more popular in California prior to the pandemic. OāNeil confirmed that fentanyl use was already apparent in Santa Clara County as early as 2012.
The pandemicās effect on economic security and disruption of social routines pushed many people over the edge, Moulin said.
āThose combined forces⦠and isolation are recipes that certainly donāt help drug use,ā Moulin said. āFrom the emergency department standpoint, what we saw was that people who were in stable in-treatment⦠the pandemic was very disruptive.ā
The abuse of substances like fentanyl goes deeper than individual addiction, Montrezza said.
āWhen we speak about drug use, what weāre talking about is a symptom of something else,ā he said. āWe need to really examine the fraying of our societal bonds and the way we relate to each other.ā
Though opioid addiction may be permanent, Moulin said itās possible for people to recover from its worst effects.
āPeople can absolutely go into recovery and have a normal life,ā Moulin said. āItās a chronic illness, but it can 100% be managed, and thereās a way out.ā
Contact Sonya Herrera at sonya.m.herrera@gmail.com or follow @SMHsoftware on Twitter.
San JosƩ Spotlight is the city's first nonprofit news organization dedicated to independent political and business reporting. Please support our public service journalism by clicking here.