• Tranq has become a bigger part of Philly?s street fentanyl supply. The

    From Let Addicts Die@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 8 10:39:53 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.democrats, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    What drug users and people who work with them in Philadelphia talk about
    is the smell. The smell of rotting flesh from open infected wounds.

    Some users say they feel ashamed of the state of their bodies, but more
    feel a sense of urgency. They need help. The wounds are killing them.

    “It is absolutely horrible. That’s the reality, though,” said James
    Sherman, known as Sherm around Philadelphia’s Kensington neighborhood,
    where he once used drugs and where he now tries to help those still on the streets.  

    The need for help has become more urgent over the last three years, as the animal tranquilizer xylazine, also called tranq, has become a bigger part
    of Philly’s street fentanyl supply. Xylazine can cause large wounds that
    won’t heal, no matter where you inject it and they can appear even if you
    snort it or smoke it. Infections are common and can even lead to
    amputations.  

    “Some people aren’t ready to see that yet,” Sherman said. “It’s literally people’s flesh rotting, and you can smell it.”  

    Kensington has seen the changing nature of America’s addiction crisis. It
    has been well known as a place to buy heroin under the elevated rail line,
    a short distance but a world away from the business and tourist centers of downtown.  

    Heroin was edged out by the more powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl. But fentanyl’s effects don’t last as long as heroin, and so xylazine was added
    to street fentanyl to “give it legs,” according to Sarah Laurel, who
    founded Savage Sisters, the harm-reduction group that employs Sherman. 

    Xylazine is not approved for humans, but it’s widely available for veterinarians to sedate large animals like horses. Like an opioid, it can
    kill pain but it cannot be reversed with Narcan, also known as
    naloxone, which is used to treat opioid overdoses, according to the US
    Drug Enforcement Agency. As xylazine is usually mixed in with fentanyl, naloxone can help an overdosed person by counteracting the opioid, though
    other measures may be needed. Workers at Savage Sisters now carry oxygen
    tanks with them.

    I could have lost my hand

    Maggie

    The drug has side effects like “tranq walk,” where people seem unaware of
    their surroundings, along with sores and wounds.  

    A user, Maggie, told CNN what she’s seen. “You shoot up and you miss, you
    get a sore. You don’t take care of your sore, you’ll wind up in a hospital
    with a hole,” she said. It had happened to her. It started out like a
    pimple, and then it got bigger, and then the skin came off and she had a half-dollar-sized wound. “I could have lost my hand.” 

    Tranq made its mark on Philadelphia’s street drugs about three years ago. That’s when doctors, users and those who try to help them saw a
    difference. 

    Dr. Joseph D’Orazio, an emergency physician and addiction medicine
    specialist at Temple University Hospital, said patients started to have
    major wounds that were different from typical injection drug use. “These
    wounds were a lot deeper, a lot more severe, there were big necrotic
    areas,” he said. “They were deep down into tendons. Sometimes you can see
    the bones, and we were starting to see more patients that were requiring amputations.”  

    Synthetic opioids, like fentanyl, are fueling the rise in overdose deaths
    Over the last several years, deaths by synthetic opioids have been on a
    sharp incline while overdose deaths by heroin have dropped off.

    Drug overdose deaths per 100,000 US residents, 2001 to 2021

    Initially, there was no demand for xylazine.  

    “Nobody was coming to Kensington to buy tranq, they were coming to get
    heroin,” said Laurel of the Savage Sisters group. “You don’t go to your
    drug dealer and say, ‘Do you have a nutrition label with this?’ … You get
    what you get, and you don’t get upset.” And whatever you get, you
    eventually feel a physical compulsion to do, she said. 

    D’Orazio, who also runs a streetside clinic in Kensington, said: “I’ve
    heard some people say, ‘Everything has fentanyl in it except the
    fentanyl.’” That’s the way fentanyl has been found as an adulterant in
    many other drugs, helping to drive US overdose deaths to record highs. But
    in Kensington, now the fentanyl supply has adulterants too. Xylazine is
    in  9 out of 10 samples of lab-tested dope in Philadelphia. “What we’re
    seeing is the bags of fentanyl sometimes don’t have fentanyl … it’s just xylazine,” he said.   

    Xylazine is most concentrated in Philadelphia, according to Dr. Rahul
    Gupta, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy. But it’s in
    all 50 states, he told CNN.  

    I’d rather come off fentanyl and heroin put together than xylazine

    Dana

    The White House is looking at xylazine as a potential “emerging threat,”
    which would trigger the development of a federal plan to address it, he
    said.  

    And last week the US Food and Drug Administration announced it had taken
    action to stop unlawful imports of xylazine.  

    That might slow the spread of xylazine, first noted in Puerto Rico in the 2000s, across the nation. But in Kensington, there could be more
    unintended consequences.   

    Xylazine withdrawal can cause intense anxiety and dysphoria, D’Orazio
    said, and the medications used to treat opioid withdrawal don’t work well
    for xylazine. That’s making the public health crisis worse. “People are avoiding the hospital because they feel like withdrawal can’t be well
    managed,” he said. “They go longer, and the disease gets worse before they
    come in.”  

    Dana, who came to Savage Sisters to get her wounds treated, said she was violently ill when in withdrawal from xylazine. “I’d rather come off
    fentanyl and heroin put together than xylazine,” she said.  

    There is also a fear that something even worse could replace the currently cheap and widespread xylazine if it becomes harder to get.  

    Neither D’Orazio nor Laurel think cutting supply will do much for people
    who are addicted and without homes in Kensington.

    D’Orazio said there needed to be more affordable housing, more access to
    health care, fewer restrictions on drugs that treat addiction, and less
    stigma on what he says is a chronic disease, like diabetes. But he added
    there also needs to be more focus on prevention of drug use disorder,
    which means looking at mental health care. His patients tended to have
    suffered childhood trauma, like abuse and neglect. There needs to be more “early intervention for people with trauma in their life,” he said.  

    Maurice, whose voice has been hoarse since he was injected in the neck
    with tranq and fentanyl a couple of months ago, said: “A lot of people
    have pain from their past they’re dealing with, and they try to numb themselves.”  

    In conversations with CNN about why they’d come to Savage Sisters, several people brought up painful past experiences like rape or abuse almost immediately, as though those memories were simmering just below the
    surface. Maggie said that, at 66, “It’s been a long life, believe me,
    doing this sh*t … things I’ve got to face. I’ve got to get some kind of therapy. This thing happened to me when I was five years old that
    shouldn’t have happened to me.”

    We need to stop isolating the substance and look beyond it

    Sarah Laurel, Savage Sisters

    Laurel, herself a recovering heroin addict, calls everyone she meets and
    tries to help in Kensington her “friend.” 

    “The people that are out here numbing their pain with substances, whether
    it’s heroin, alcohol, cocaine, we need to address the pain, we need to
    stop isolating the substance and look beyond it,” she said.   

    Savage Sisters offers several mental health programs for people in its
    recovery houses, and Laurel says it’s very expensive, but worth it. She’s
    had to work hard to raise money. “Until it directly affects them, nobody
    cares. It’s ugly. It’s not a cute, fun thing to donate your money or time
    to, right? It’s hard. It’s rough. It’s sad. It’s painful. … I had to come
    up with ways to convince people that we’re worth saving.”  

    Some news organizations have called xylazine “the zombie drug.” Laurel
    hates that term. “The only way that you can get rid of a zombie is by
    killing their brain,” she said. “Why would you say that about my friends?
    Why would you say that about a human? It’s already hard enough trying to
    get people to care about us.” 

    <https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/07/health/philadelphia-xylazine-tranq- drug/index.html>

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  • From Bobbie Sellers@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 8 08:02:04 2023
    On 3/8/23 01:39, Let Addicts Die wrote:
    What a sweetheart name for those who feel no empathy with the addicts and users of drugs.

    What drug users and people who work with them in Philadelphia talk about
    is the smell. The smell of rotting flesh from open infected wounds.

    You look at the multiple groups this is directed toward
    and this is the only one that is relevant.

    It is Trolling! Don't follow up directly and do not do
    the xylazine which could be a big nightmare for the user and
    caregivers.


    <https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/07/health/philadelphia-xylazine-tranq- drug/index.html>



    --
    bliss dash SF 4 ever at dslextreme dot com

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