The organization Families Against Fentanyl analyzed data from
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and
found that Illinois is ranked sixth in the country for the most
fentanyl deaths from April 2022 through April of this year.
Spokesperson Moira Muntz said nearly 3,000 Illinois families
lost loved ones to fentanyl poisonings.
“Just devastated and heartbroken by the loss of their loved ones
and it's happening far too often to far too many families so our
goal is to raise awareness and to put pressure on lawmakers in
Washington to take further action,” Muntz told The Center
Square.
The
CDC estimates that more than 111,000 Americans died from a drug
overdose in the 12-month period ending in April, and more than
77,000 of those deaths involved fentanyl and other synthetic
opioids.
Families Against Fentanyl also found that fentanyl deaths are
increasing at more than double the rate of overall drug overdose
deaths.
The top three states with the biggest increases in overdose
deaths are Oregon (67%), Washington (65%) and Nevada (58%).
The group is calling for President Joe Biden to establish a
White House Task Force dedicated to the nation’s illicit
fentanyl poisoning and drug “overdose” crisis.
“This is alarming news and it should serve as a wake-up call to
our leaders in Washington that more must be done and fast,”
founder Jim Rauh said.
Muntz said in most cases, the person who overdoses is unaware
fentanyl is involved because Mexican cartels have been lacing
other narcotics with fentanyl, often unbeknownst to users.
“We urge folks to call it fentanyl poisoning rather than an
overdose death and it's our hope that the CDC will update their
terminology as well,” Muntz said.
Muntz adds that fentanyl continues to be the number one cause of
death of Americans 18 to 45 and the new data from the CDC shows
deaths are continuing to increase.
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