Misinformation about fentanyl exposure threatens to undermine overdose response

By Henry Larweh KFF Robustness News Fentanyl the deadly synthetic opioid driving the nation s high drug overdose rates is also caught up in another increasingly serious predicament misinformation False and misleading narratives on social media in news reports and even in popular television dramas suggesting people can overdose from touching fentanyl rather than ingesting it are now informing framework and spending decisions In an episode of the CBS cop drama Blue Bloods for instance Detective Maria Baez becomes comatose after accidentally touching powdered fentanyl In another drama S W A T Sgt Daniel Hondo Harrelson warns his co-workers You touch the pure stuff without wearing gloves say good night Related Articles Sleep training is no longer just for babies Specific schools are teaching teens how to sleep A Scandia pastor overcame addiction Now he confronts the stigma in a podcast aimed at faith communities States push Medicaid work rules but sparse programs help enrollees find jobs Taking a mental robustness leave from work is an option most of people don t know about After assessment RFK Jr comments local entrepreneur to host Happy Hour for Adults with Autism While fentanyl-related deaths have drastically risen over the past decade no evidence suggests any resulted from incidentally touching or inhaling it and little to no evidence that any resulted from consuming it in marijuana products Latest statistics indicates that fentanyl-related deaths have begun to drop There is also almost no evidence that law enforcement personnel are at heightened liability of accidental overdoses due to such exposures Still there is a steady stream of reports which generally turn out to be false of officers allegedly becoming ill after handling fentanyl It s only in the TV dramas where that happens stated Brandon del Pozo a retired Burlington Vermont police chief who researches policing and general physical condition policies and practices at Brown University In fact fentanyl overdoses are commonly caused by ingesting the drug illicitly as a pill or powder And the greater part accidental exposures occur when people who use drugs even those who do not use opioids unknowingly consume fentanyl because it is so often used to cut street drugs such as heroin and cocaine Despite what scientific evidence suggests about fentanyl and its risks misinformation can persist in populace discourse and among first responders on the front lines of the dilemma Daniel Meloy a senior region engagement specialist at the drug recovery organizations Operation Save Lives and QRT National announced he thinks of misinformation as more of an unknown than it is an anxiety or a fear We re experiencing it often before the information can be understood and shared by masses vitality and addiction medicine practitioners Meloy declared Particular state and local governments are investing money from their share of the billions in opioid settlement funds in efforts to protect first responders from purported risks perpetuated through fentanyl misinformation In and cities towns and counties across eight states used settlement funds to purchase drug detection devices for law enforcement agencies spending just over million altogether Two mass spectrometers were purchased for at least for the Greeley Colorado police department to protect those who are tasked with handling those substances Del Pozo the retired police chief declared fentanyl is present in the greater part illicit opioids uncovered at the scene of an arrest But that doesn t mean you need to spend a lot of money on fentanyl detection for officer safety he declared If that spending decision is motivated by officer safety concerns then it s misspent money del Pozo noted Fentanyl misinformation is affecting protocol in other approaches too Florida for instance has on the books a law that makes it a second-degree felony to cause an overdose or bodily injury to a first responder through this kind of secondhand fentanyl exposure Similar rule has been considered by states such as Tennessee and West Virginia the latter stipulating a penalty of years to life imprisonment if the exposure results in death Inhabitants physical condition advocates worry these laws will make people shy away from seeking help for people who are overdosing A lot of people leave overdose scenes because they don t want to interact with police commented Erin Russell a principal with Physical condition Management Associates a soundness care industry research and consulting firm Florida does include a caveat in its statute that any person acting in good faith to seek health assistance for someone they believe to be overdosing may not be arrested charged or prosecuted And even when inhabitants agenda is crafted to protect first responders as well as regular people misinformation can undermine a operation s messaging Take Mississippi s One Pill Can Kill initiative Led by the state attorney general Lynn Fitch the initiative aims to provide guidance and teaching to Mississippi residents about fentanyl and its risks While it promotes the availability and use of harm reduction tools such as naloxone and fentanyl test strips Fitch has also propped up misinformation At the Mississippi Coalition of Bail Sureties conference Fitch revealed If you figure out that pill s got fentanyl you better be ready to dispose of it because you can get it through your fingers based on the repeatedly debunked belief that a person can overdose by just touching fentanyl Officers on the ground meanwhile sometimes are warned to proceed with caution in providing lifesaving interventions at overdose scenes because of these alleged accidental exposure risks This caution is often evidenced in a push to provide first responders with masks and other personal protective equipment Fitch recounted the crowd at the conference You can t just go out and give CPR like you did before However as with other secondhand exposures the vulnerability for a fentanyl overdose from applying mouth-to-mouth is negligible with no clinical evidence to suggest it has occurred Her comments underscore growing concerns often not supported by science that officers and first responders increasingly face exposure risks during overdose responses Her office did not respond to questions about these comments Robustness care experts say they are not against providing first responders with protective equipment but that fentanyl misinformation is clouding initiative and risks delaying critical interventions such as CPR and rescue breathing People are afraid to do rescue breathing because they re like Well what if there s fentanyl in the person s mouth Russell declared Hesitating for even a moment because of fentanyl misinformation could delay a technique that is incredibly major in an overdose response KFF Fitness News Distributed by Tribune Content Agency LLC