fentanyl

IBH President's Letter on Fentanyl Published in The Washington Post

In response to The Washington Post’s series on fentanyl, IBH President Robert L. DuPont, MD authored a letter to the editor, published on December 16, 2022:

The Cartel Rx series is an important contribution, recognizing the immensity of the U.S. fentanyl overdose problem and the inadequacy of efforts to turn back the devastating tide over the past two decades; however, three essential realities were overlooked.

First, there are virtually no drug overdose deaths where fentanyl is the only drug present. The “fentanyl” problem is 100 percent a polydrug problem. The United States has a five-decades-long history of demonizing one drug at a time (i.e., heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, prescription opioids), yet these were, and still are, polydrug problems.

Second, the only way to meaningfully reduce the supply of fentanyl and other nonmedical drugs is to take away the $150 billion spent by Americans who use them. Leave that on the table, and there is no end to the supply by drug-trafficking organizations eager to collect money. There is nothing unique to either Mexico or China regarding fentanyl. It is easily synthesized anywhere in the world.

Third, though each overdose death is a tragedy for the individuals, their families and friends, most who use illicit drugs are well aware of the deadly risk of fentanyl and other drugs. The series noted more than 9 million opioid users in the country and more than 107,000 deaths; that is about 1 in 100 illegal opioid users dying of an overdose each year.

Robert L. DuPont, Chevy Chase

The writer, the first director of the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse and the second White House drug czar, is president of the Institute for Behavior and Health.

See the coverage on The Washington Post.

NEW REPORT: Fentanyl as Sentinel - The Emerging Threat of Synthetic and Counterfeit Drugs

Authored by John J. Coleman, PhD and Robert L. DuPont, MD, and published by The Heritage Foundation

This compelling report outlines the story of fentanyl and identifies key policy recommendations to address the national drug epidemic. 

Fentanyl is a sentinel calling our attention to the potential for a slew of laboratory-based drugs produced by an ever-expanding illegal global drug market to meet a growing demand. Included in this threat are the fentanyl-laced counterfeit drugs manufactured to look like well-known and trusted pharmaceutical products but containing deadly amounts of fentanyl instead of the expected active pharmaceutical ingredient. Unrestrained by regulatory controls and labeling requirements, today’s drug trafficker-entrepreneur poses a serious threat to patients and non-patients alike. If we hope to meet these challenges successfully, we will need radically new thinking, better data systems, and improved technology to keep counterfeit drugs and deadly fentanyl analogs out of our communities and medicinal drug supplies.

Read the Full Report and print a PDF copy here.

BLEAK NEW ESTIMATES IN DRUG EPIDEMIC

The New York Times reports a record number of overdose deaths in 2017, reaching 72,000. Reflecting a 10% increase in deaths from 2016, the overdose epidemic shows little sign of slowing down. "According to the CDC estimates, overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids rose sharply, while deaths from heroin, prescription opioid pills and methadone fell."

"Strong synthetic opioids like fentanyl and its analogues have become mixed into black-market supplies of heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine and the class of anti-anxiety medicines known as benzodiazepines. Unlike heroin, which is derived from poppy plants, fentanyl can be manufactured in a laboratory, and it is often easier to transport because it is more concentrated." Read more.

Copyright New York Times

Copyright New York Times

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