Officials seized more than 115 million pills containing fentanyl in 2023. The opiate is often mixed with street drugs and linked to overdoses.

Counterfeit fentanyl pills are being seized by law enforcement in the United States at an unprecedented rate. A study published May 13, 2024, in the International Journal of Drug Policy indicated that more than 115 million pills containing illicit fentanyl were seized by US law enforcement in 2023.

The researchers behind the study said the number had grown from 71 million pills in 2022 and 50,000 pills in 2017.

The counterfeit fentanyl pills are made to look like legal prescription opioid medication — such as oxycodone and tramadol — but are often far deadlier than the originals.

“Fentanyl in pill form is now beginning to dominate the drug supply [in the US]. Pills are easy to ship and disguise and can also be marketed easily, as Americans have a reputation of loving their pills,” said the study’s lead author Joseph Palamar of NYU Langone Health in the US.

  • @grue@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    0
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    Making a highly addictive substance like opioids available OTC is not a way to cut down on opioid addiction and abuse.

    Who said it was? Certainly not me!

    What it is, is a way to cut down on overdoses due to sketchy street drugs being laced with shit the consumer didn’t expect.


    [Edit] Let me put it this way:

    Which is more important, trying to prevent people from becoming addicted (which, let’s be honest, is at least as much a moral crusade as it is a health concern), or trying to prevent the drug from destroying their lives (whether via overdose, exorbitant cost, or criminal prosecution) if they do become addicted to it?

    • Flying Squid
      link
      fedilink
      12 months ago

      Legalizing it does not prevent overdosing, it also would make it less likely to treat the root cause of the pain.

      And I didn’t say legalization shouldn’t happen, I said it shouldn’t happen alone. Preventing addiction should be a priority if you legalize drugs.

        • Flying Squid
          link
          fedilink
          12 months ago

          Really?

          How about the fact that legal alcohol causes college kids to die of alcohol poisoning on a regular basis?

          • @grue@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            12 months ago
            1. Alcohol and opioids don’t have the same effects and aren’t used the same way. It’s not as if people are binging heroin at parties.

            2. Alcohol isn’t legal for most college kids (i.e. those under 21), so that doesn’t prove what you think it does. Besides, in order to make your claim, you’d need to compare the situation of legal alcohol to the situation of illegal alcohol, not legal alcohol vs. illegal other drugs.

            3. Moreover, alcohol’s change in legality at adulthood is part of the problem: it being forbidden until that point hypes up the mystique and makes social drinking seem cooler than it really is. We’re dumping these young adults into an environment of alcohol availability right as their parental supervision has ended and peer pressure is near its peak. Is it any wonder there are problems when we set them up for failure like that?

            4. We tried prohibiting alcohol once; it didn’t go well. Unlike with opioids and the “war on drugs,” we learned our lesson.

            • Flying Squid
              link
              fedilink
              02 months ago

              Wait… sorry… so now you’re saying opioids should be legal for children to take recreationally?