Fentanyl,
the powerful drug that killed Prince, presents growing threat
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[June 03, 2016]
By Fiona Ortiz
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Fentanyl, a powerful
painkiller that a medical examiner identified as the drug that killed
the superstar Prince six weeks ago, has been responsible for an epidemic
of overdose deaths around the United States, according to federal
officials.
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The most potent narcotic known, it is a man-made opioid 50 times
stronger than heroin and 100 times more so than morphine, according
to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control website. The agency says
illegally manufactured non-pharmaceutical fentanyl, and related
overdoses, are a rising problem.
Fifty-seven-year-old Prince, one of the most influential musicians
of his generation, was found dead in his home in a Minneapolis
suburb on April 21. He died of an accidental, self-administered
overdose of the drug, the county medical examiner said in a death
report on Thursday.
Overdose deaths from synthetic opioids jumped by 80 percent in 2014
over the previous year, the CDC said, suggesting much of the
increase may reflect the greater availability of illegally made
fentanyl. In Ohio, fentanyl overdoses jumped to 514 in 2014 from 92
a year earlier, for example.
The problem has triggered a federal response. U.S. President Barack
Obama earlier this year asked Congress for $1.1 billion in new
funding over two years to expand treatment for users of heroin and
prescription pain killers.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration last year issued a
nationwide alert about the dangers of fentanyl, saying even a tiny
amount can kill. A pain reliever usually used for terminally ill
patients, it is also produced in underground labs for sale as a
street drug.
While fentanyl was largely a problem in the Midwest and on the East
Coast in recent years, in April, a rash of fentanyl overdoses hit
northern California, 10 of them fatal.
It is not clear whether Prince had a prescription for fentanyl after
a reported hip surgery. And if he was prescribed the drug, it is not
known by what doctor, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reported on
Thursday.
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Burt Kahn, a lawyer who specializes in medical negligence, said
there was a potential for criminal liability if a doctor prescribed
fentanyl to Prince, or got him habituated, and then withdrew the
drug.
"Fentanyl is a drug that would almost never be prescribed to a
patient like Prince who doesn't have terminal cancer, because the
potential for overdose is extremely high," Kahn said.
He said doctors ordinarily would want to closely monitor the vital
signs of a patient taking fentanyl, to make sure the drug is not
slowing down breathing or heart rate, although it can be
administered in patches to control the dosage.
Fentanyl threats have come in waves, the DEA said. There were more
than 1,000 deaths attributed to fentanyl between 2005 and 2007,
mostly in Chicago, Detroit and Philadelphia, traced to a single lab
in Mexico that was dismantled.
(Editing by Frank McGurty and Bill Rigby)
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