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What the Fentanyl?

Chances are by now you’ve heard of fentanyl – an opioid pain medication said to be 50-100 times more powerful than morphine.

Fentanyl patches were originally introduced for palliative patients, but it did not take long for people to start using them recreationally. The patches are often cut up and chewed or smoked or sometimes the medication is scraped off and injected. About five years ago, illicit ‘bootleg’ fentanyl started showing up on the streets. This powdered form of the drug was being mixed and pressed into tablets, coloured green, and sold as counterfeit OxyContin. While many at first did not know they were buying “fake oxy’s”, people eventually started asking for these ‘greenies’, ‘green beans’, or ‘shady 80’s’ specifically, and demand for fentanyl grew.

Because the drug is so cheap, so little is needed to produce an effect, and it is relatively easy for savvy traffickers to import, bootleg fentanyl has been showing up in other drugs like meth and cocaine, and most of the heroin on the streets today contains at least some amount of fentanyl. Unfortunately, the drug is also very toxic and the difference between a non-lethal and lethal dose is miniscule. This is the reason people across the country and locally have been dying at alarming rates.

So what are we doing about it?

For more information, call our CMHA-HRB Information and Referral Program at 905-315-8664.

Further resources:

Face the Fentanyl

Toward the Heart

Opioid Overdose in Ontario

 

By Angus Coll-Smith

CMHA-HRB Case Manager, Community Concurrent Disorders Program (CCDP)

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