Conference Coverage

Fentanyl fears drive many opioid users, interviews suggest


 

REPORTING FROM CPDD 2018

Some say pursue fentanyl

In the New Hampshire interviews, 25% of the 84% who’d used fentanyl said they actively seek it out, with one expressing a preference for the “real dope” (heroin laced with fentanyl) versus the “maintenance dope” of heroin alone. Ms. Meier explained what that means: “We’ve heard that once you use fentanyl or fentanyl-laced heroin, heroin doesn’t adequately manage your withdrawal symptoms or give enough of a high. So they will use heroin to get by, but they really want fentanyl or fentanyl-laced heroin.”

She added: “We’ve learned that users are seeking fentanyl due to its potency (a stronger, better high with quicker onset than heroin), cost (cheaper than heroin, so more “bang for your buck”), and once they use fentanyl or fentanyl-laced heroin, heroin doesn’t have the same effect/high.”

As for the risk of overdose, “people want the best high they can get at the cheapest cost,” she said.” They presume it will be potent enough to produce an exceptional high but [they won’t] die from an overdose due to being sufficiently tolerant to handle it. Also, some just felt hopeless and weren’t afraid of an OD.”

Comments from users about fentanyl

  • “The high is wonderful. It’s splendidly wonderful. It’s magnified heroin feeling by a great number,” said a 45-year-old man from Baltimore.
  • “You spend the same amount of money or even less for it, and you’re getting 3 times as high as you did on heroin,” said one user in New Hampshire. “Who wouldn’t want that?”

Risk-reduction techniques embraced

  • In Baltimore, a 39-year-old woman said: “I have a lot of associates that are letting me know, ‘Don’t go to that place because they selling fentanyl.’ ”
  • Some users test their heroin. “Like when I get stuff I don’t know what it is, I do a little bit before I do something that I feel,” a Lawrence, Mass., female user in her 20s said. “Like, I want to kind of scale out how much I want to do. Because I don’t want to die. But these people are just doing a gram shot and just ... my friend just died 2 days ago.”

Dr. Ciccarone said some of the biggest proponents of harm-reduction among users were African Americans aged 60 and older who had used for many decades.

“They fear fentanyl and are using old-school harm reduction strategies for staying safer: “tooting” (snorting) and tester shots (small injections to test the quality),” he said. “These may seem like minor strategies, but if enough of the population applies them to their daily drug use, many deaths would be averted. In this crisis, we need all the wisdom we can get, so we should listen to these elders.”

Dr. Ciccarone’s research was funded by the National Institutes of Health and NIDA. Dr. Ciccarone reported no relevant disclosures. The Dartmouth College study was funded by NIDA, and those authors reported no relevant disclosures.

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