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Controversial tool emerges in opioid fight: fentanyl test strips

avcpl

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Feb 4, 2009
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https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/02/health/fentanyl-test-strip/index.html

A controversial tool has emerged in the fight against opioid overdose deaths. It's a strip that allows people who use street drugs such as cocaine and heroin to test whether their drugs are laced with fentanyl.

If the drugs test positive, they might choose not to use them or choose to use less of them.
According to a new report by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, fentanyl is now the deadliest drug in America and was linked to nearly 29% of all overdose deaths in 2016. The synthetic opioid is about 80 to 100 times stronger than morphine and produces a powerful high. It's cheap and sometimes mixed into street drugs without the buyer even knowing. Given its potency, it can be deadly.

Fentanyl test strip technology was originally developed by a Canadian biotech company BTNX to test urine samples for the presence of the drug, but the strips work basically the same way when they're dipped in the residue of cooked heroin or when a little water is added to empty baggies of cocaine.
It works like a pregnancy test in reverse. One line on the strip suggests that the drugs are positive for fentanyl. Two lines is interpreted as a negative result.

In a study, researchers at Johns Hopkins and Brown University determined that the test strips worked to detect even low concentrations of fentanyl in street drugs.

"Our findings bring to the table evidence that can inform a public health approach to the fentanyl crisis. Smart strategies that reduce harm can save lives," Susan Sherman, a co-author on the study, said in a news release.
According to the study, several programs in the United States that distribute clean syringes to people who use drugs have started to distribute fentanyl test strips, as well.

The test strips aren't 100% effective at eliminating the risk of overdose, since they don't identify all forms of fentanyl and can produce false negatives. They also don't let users know how much fentanyl the drugs contain.
Still, the researchers see an opportunity to halt the increase in fentanyl-related overdose deaths.
"We are at a pivotal moment in the overdose epidemic, and we need to embrace the full range of interventions that can save lives," Sherman said.

"Let's say you had some drugs you were going to inject. ... If it tests positive, you have options," the video explains. "One, you can shoot half back into another sterile syringe, which may not only be life-saving but also cost-effective. Or two, you may even choose not to do it."
The concept of drug checking has jarred some.

The Trump administration's assistant secretary of Health and Human Services for mental Health and substance use, Dr. Elinore McCance-Katz, has expressed ardent opposition to the use of the fentanyl test strips.

In a blog post, Katz laid out several reasons. Among them is a concern that even if people who use drugs know that their drugs are laced with fentanyl, they will still use the drugs, despite the apparent danger. They might also use the strips to seek out drugs that contain fentanyl to achieve a stronger high.

"We can't afford to create a false sense of security. ... Let's not rationalize putting tools in place to help them continue their lifestyle more 'safely,' " McCance-Katz said.
 
Katz's response is the same garbage political response needle exchange programs faced for a very long time (and still face, in some parts). I think it sends a message that the lives of drug users are less valuable, which is bs. Harm reduction measures are often politically unpopular, because politicians are so afraid of being seen as anything but "tough on crime". They and/or their constituents lack the ability to discern between enabling and harm reduction. Just venting...anyways the test strips will no doubt be a valuable tool and I hope the NEP in my area starts distributing them.
 
It's unfortunate that this is considered "controversial."
 
New headline, "Assistant Secretary of Health and Mental Health not concerned about the safety of the public"

Pretty standard stuff really and it sickens me.
 
conservatives thinking junkies are best dead does not make test strips controversial. the media uses keywords to sell ppc advertising.

would be zero percent surprised if the surge of fentanyl over recent years has been permitted, if not facilitated, by some government agency.
 
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conservatives thinking junkies are best dead does not make test strips controversial. the media uses keywords to sell ppc advertising.

Well, as the story mentions, a White House administrator did come out against them publicly.
 
that the reporter was able to find a representative who voiced default opposition does not make them a genuinely contentious topic. it's manufactured debate presented at the bottom of the inverted pyramid to create grounds for a sensationalized headline. "controversial" is not the appropriate adjective to describe something as innocuous as fent test strips. john isn't confused about that. he and his editors know that it generates clicks, which sells ad space.
 
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^For school, I've extensively studied and written about roadblocks to implementation of needle exchange programs, using mainly peer-reviewed studies from credible sources. In that work, I learned a lot about why political support is hard to come by for harm reduction efforts in general. It is because politicians cannot be seen by voters as being soft on crime. That's an oversimplification, but a true one.
The media is not manufacturing controversy where there is none; fent strips are controversial to both politicians and ordinary folk. Anything that makes using drugs safer is misconstrued as a tacit endorsement of drug use.
 
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Yep, it amazes me that this is controversial tbh. It brings to mind some of the recent debate in Australia regarding pill-testing at raves/doofs/parties/etc. The reasoning is similar: to licitly test pills may imply that drugs are safe and they aren't, they cause cancer, masturbation and (for some unlucky few) great fun and laughter. We cannot have that. :\

Let's not rationalize putting tools in place to help them continue their lifestyle more 'safely,

This is close to evil in the way ridiculous political cunts often go. For the sake of retaining their own job, they better echo this hardline, 'law-and-order' stance despite it actively killing people.

Hopefully, some enterprising soul just says fuck it and floods the streets with these test strips.
 
Brings to mind the religious right's objection to sex ed and teaching youth about condoms because "they shouldn't be having sex anyways". Just a complete denial of reality.
 
fair enough. controversial.

these are available at the mobile needle exchange in chicago. i get them from dancesafe because i?m an intranasal user and don?t frequent the exchange. 100 percent of dope, both the little plastic dime bags from street dealers and the chunks of raw from phone dealers, tests positive. i believe the results are accurate.
 
Dancesafe is still around hey? That's good. Haven't heard mention of them in like 15 years, and at that time all they did was ecstasy related. Glad they're addressing heroin now.
 
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