Health & Fitness
DEA Warns Of 'Mass Overdose Events' From Fentanyl: See CT Data
Fentanyl has been a growing problem in Connecticut. It is involved in the large majority of fatal overdoses.
CONNECTICUT — The Drug Enforcement Administration warned cities across the country about the possibility of mass overdose events linked to the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl.
DEA head Anne Milgram sent a letter to law enforcement agencies regarding 58 mass overdose events that claimed the lives of 29 people in recent months.
Fentanyl has been a growing problem in Connecticut over the past decade. There were about 1,160 overdose deaths that involved fentanyl in 2020, which was up from 980 in 2019, according to statistics from the state Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
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Fentanyl was involved in fewer than 4 percent of fatal Connecticut overdoses in 2012. By 2016 it was involved in about half of fatal overdose and by 2020 the synthetic opioid was involved in five out of every six fatal overdoses.
A mass-overdose event is one in which three or more people take a lethal dose in proximity of time and place. In recent months, such events have been reported in Wilton Manors, Florida; Austin, Texas; Cortez, Colorado; Commerce City, Colorado; Omaha, Nebraska; St. Louis, Missouri; and Washington, D.C.
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Natural and synthetic opioids are a scourge everywhere, though illegally manufactured fentanyl makes them more dangerous, “killing Americans at an unprecedented rate,” Milgram said in a news release.
Two-thirds of the 105,750 people who died of drug overdoses in the 12-month period ending in October 2021 were using synthetic opioids, primarily fentanyl, according to provisional data published last month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
In fact, the DEA said, fentanyl killed more Americans than guns and traffic crashes combined.
Pharmaceutical fentanyl is about 100 times more potent than opioids and has a legitimate purpose, but drug cartels also mix it up in clandestine labs and smuggle it into the United States through Mexico for the black market, according to the DEA. On the streets, cocaine is laced with fentanyl to make it more powerful or stretch the base product, or it’s pressed into pills as passed off as legitimate prescription pills such as Percocet, Vicodin or OxyContin.
Because there is no official oversight or quality control, the counterfeit pills often contain lethal doses of fentanyl.
“Drug traffickers are driving addiction, and increasing their profits, by mixing fentanyl with other illicit drugs,” Milgram said. “Tragically, many overdose victims have no idea they are ingesting deadly fentanyl, until it's too late."
Illegally produced fentanyl is found in all 50 states. Opioid deaths increased more than 28 percent in the 12-month period ending in April 2021, according to the most recent report on opioid morbidity in the United States.
The DEA said it is ready to step in and assist law enforcement officials in Connecticut to trace mass-overdose events back to local drug dealers and the international cartels behind the surging domestic supply of fentanyl.
So far this year, the DEA has seized almost 2,000 pounds of fentanyl and 1 million fake pills. Last year, the agency seized more than 15,000 pounds of fentanyl, four times as much as was confiscated in 2017.
That’s enough to kill every American, the agency said.
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