Data points to a nearly 75% increase in overdoses in Missouri since 2019, and last year was the second consecutive year that fentanyl accounted for over two-thirds of overdoses in Missouri.
Trends in Missouri match what the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration describes as a “nationwide overdose epidemic” fueled by the spread of fentanyl.
The drug has a place in reducing suffering when its use is deliberate and controlled. Diluted to thousandths of a milligram and administered by medical professionals, fentanyl can relieve pain in half the time it takes morphine and without its unpleasant side effects.
However, it takes merely one grain of salt’s worth of fentanyl to cross into a fatal dose.
The drug is up to 50 times more powerful than heroin and far cheaper to produce. It can also be spliced into various drugs to make counterfeit pills that can be fatal.
Counterfeit pills are often disguised as legitimate prescription drugs such as Oxycontin, Xanax, Vicodin, Adderall and Percocet and are increasingly culprits in fentanyl overdoses.
Overdoses can occur when victims believe they are using cocaine or pill-based drugs that don’t usually prove fatal, according to the DEA.
For every ten fentanyl-laced counterfeit pills created, six contain a dose that can kill, the agency said in a public notice. Earlier in June, nearly 1,000 counterfeit Percocet pills laced with fentanyl were recovered in one traffic stop in Miller County.
Nationwide, DEA seizures of counterfeit pills containing fentanyl have risen by 430% since 2019. The DEA released a letter in 2021 warning federal, state and local law enforcement about so-called “mass-overdose” events — three or more overdoses at the same time and place.
“Fentanyl is killing Americans at an unprecedented rate,” according to DEA Administrator Anne Milgram. “Drug traffickers are driving addiction, and increasing their profits, by mixing fentanyl with other illicit drugs. Tragically, many overdose victims have no idea they are ingesting deadly fentanyl until it’s too late.”
Citizens make a difference
Palmer also works as an educator with the University of Missouri-St. Louis Addiction Science team and recently led a 45-minute class to teach participants how to administer naloxone, a synthetic drug that inhibits opiate receptors in the nervous system while reversing adverse effects.
Throughout the course of this Save-a-Life class, attendees receive step-by-step instructions about naloxone to keep a person alive while waiting for first responders.
Students are given 4mg doses, typically enough to save a life. If a first dose isn’t effective, emergency responders can administer additional doses until the patient is revived. Eighty-five percent of revivals recorded by UMSL are achieved within two doses.
In the last two years, records from Palmer’s EMS station show that her team has administered naloxone 189 times. The procedure has reversed a number of potential deaths in Boone County. Missouri Institute of Mental Health data shows that no more than four people given naloxone in Columbia perished each year from 2018 to 2022.
Save-a-Life training is often attended by people with no background in emergency medical aid, or “good Samaritans,” said Heather Harlan, who has also been an instructor. She said family members and friends of those with substance use disorder seek out the class.
“We don’t ask questions — they get training and they get naloxone,” she said.
Good Samaritans
Adermann’s first thought was fentanyl overdose. He knocked on the window, and the stranger slowly sobered up and drove away. If it had been an overdose, Adermann said he wouldn’t have known what to do. So, he decided to attend the training.
A recent UMSL report suggests that fire police, EMS and clinicians account for only slightly more naloxone administration than friends, significant others, parents and strangers like Aldermann.
As of April 2023, citizens made up 47% of reported naloxone administrations, with emergency personnel taking responsibility for nearly 50%, approaching an even split, according to UMSL data.
The UMSL Addiction Science Team responsible for the data set qualifies its findings, saying that results are “limited to those who (have) been trained and (feel) comfortable completing it,” and that its figures are likely a “large underestimate” of non-fatal overdoses in Missouri.
Harlan said residents can no longer expect to avoid witnessing an overdose event — a person slumped in a public space and unresponsive — and as the first person on scene they’re best equipped to give the victim the best shot of survival.
Camaron Nielsen, a volunteer for Heart of Missouri CASA, court-appointed special advocates for children in foster care, came to the training as part of her continuing education.
As an advocate for children in foster care, Nielsen said she knows fentanyl might reach those communities too, so she wants to be prepared.
“It (drug use) is something that is an unfortunate reality so we try to be knowledgeable about it,” she said.
Naloxone distribution
For those who haven’t seen an overdose in their circle of friends or acquaintances, it’s difficult to understand fentanyl overdoses, Harlan said. But stories she’s heard make the impact on the community clear.
“We too casually say that ‘this is a choice,’” and dismiss the problem as a moral failing, Harlan said. “When people ask me, ‘well why do people use drugs?’ Pain is why.”
This story originally appeared in the Columbia Missourian.
The pubs won't take action because they see the demographics aren't white upper to middle class registered pubs. Just like trump and covid, the missouri pubs see a cruel opening to make minorities suffer......and lose democratic voters of this state by taking no action. This country led the world in covid deaths because of the cruelty of trump-led misinformation and inaction to protect the most vulnerable. Hitler did same but was less subtle. LOCK TRUMP UP!
ReplyDeleteSee I told you there were long term side effects from wearing a mask… oxygen deprivation to the brain so sad
DeleteLegalize all drugs, let God sort it out
ReplyDelete745 probably was covid vaccinated but too maga-fied to let any trump disciples know. Loyalty to qanon sounds so childish.
ReplyDeleteDo your research. There are far more deaths on fentanyl in the white population (50%) than Hispanic (29%) African American (20%) This is problem that does not care your race, gender or politics.
ReplyDeleteAnd this administrations answer is to be more soft on criminals and leave our borders wide open. Now you tell me they don't want to destroy America. SMH
ReplyDeleteYou cry baby demoncrats always make every topic or discussion about republicans vs demoncrats
ReplyDeleteIt seems we cannot have any Civil Debate, Conversation, or Find a Resolution - without Bringing Politics into the Mix.
ReplyDeleteAll 3-Parties have their Faults - Democrats, Republicans, and Independents. Yet - Most of You Uneducated, Single-Minded, Single-Thought Individuals - Can have Only One Solution - It is the Other Political Parties - Fault Or Problem - - Forget Common Sense and Actual Facts - Or Working On a Solution - JUST BLAME THE OTHER POLITICAL PARTY FOR THE PROBLEM - AND WE CAN ALL SLEEP AT NIGHT...
To Fix the Problems we have in America - Will take all of Us - Working as Americans to Solve the Problems of the United States - - Not by Just Pointing Fingers - but Working towards Honest Solutions - For Everyone - Not just a Political Party.
We need to Stand-Up and Fix the Many Problems in Missouri:
Since Crime and Education - Goes Hand in Hand - -
Study ranks Missouri at the bottom for its early education system; Arkansas at the top.
Missouri ranked No. 49 in state K-12 funding in 2020.
YET WE HAVE THE LOWEST CIGARETTE TAX IN THE NATION - OF $0.17 / 20-Pack - - It should be 10-Times that which the State could use to Fund Education, Police & Fire Departments, and Health Care Expenses for all those Individuals Cost of Treatment for Cancer from Smoking.
10 Most Dangerous States in the US (2023) - Missouri is 7th.
1. Alaska
2. New Mexico
3. Tennessee
4. Arkansas
5. Arizona
6. Louisiana
7. Missouri
8. South Carolina
9. South Dakota
10. Michigan
Three Missouri cities in top ten for most violent crime rate in U.S.
City Number of Violent Crimes in 2020 Rate per 100,000 people
1. Memphis, TN 15,310 2,418
2. Detroit, MI 14,370 2,248
3. St. Louis 6,017 1,995
4. Little Rock, AR 3,657 1,805.11
5. South Bend, IN 1,765 1,706
6. Cleveland 6,281 1,685
7. Milwaukee 9,407 1,629
8. Kansas City, MO 7,919 1,558
9. Lansing, MI 1,699 1,508
10. Springfield, MO 2,545 1,504
IF YOU FAIL TO RECOGNIZE THE RELAVANCE BETWEEN EDUCATION AND CRIME - PLEASE, PLEASE - EDUCATE YOURSELVES - - - STOP BLAMING THE OTHER POLITICAL PARTY AND LET'S TRY TO FIX THESE PROBLEMS - - - OUR EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM IS FAILING AND OUR CRIME RATES KEEP GOING UP - -
All the cities listed are Democratic ran…
ReplyDeleteWell thought out and written 729. 156 is a dumbass.
ReplyDeleteCheck it out looks like 1:56 is correct
ReplyDeleteLook again 557, majority of those cities you refrence are in red states. Again, the republican playbook is to allow minorities to suffer the indignity of hopelessness and despair....and reduce voting democrats. The legacy of Reagans "just say no" and the Iran/Contra debacle continues to allow drugs and crime to run rampant in our cities. Even republican run cities at that.
ReplyDelete