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Sunday, May 19, 2019

Drug trafficking

Pure methamphetamine in rock from, known as ice, is photographed at the DEA's North Central Laboratory in Chicago, Ill. Managers at the lab say this is, by far, the most common type of meth they've been seeing. (Anthony Souffle/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS) As the opioid crisis peaks, meth and cocaine deaths explode






Most states are keeping a close eye on opioid overdose deaths, but they may need to start focusing on cocaine and other stimulants as well.
It turns out that the same lethal drug that has been driving the nation's spiraling opioid epidemic is also causing a historic surge in overdose deaths among cocaine users.
That's according to a new analysis of death certificate data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showing that fentanyl — a cheap synthetic opioid that is a hundred times more potent than morphine — and other opioids were involved in nearly three-fourths of all cocaine overdose deaths and an increasing number of methamphetamine deaths.
In a drug overdose epidemic that has killed more than 700,000 Americans since 1999, state and local officials have been primarily concentrating on opioids, which were involved in nearly 70% of overdose deaths in 2017.
The CDC's new analysis indicates that public health and law enforcement officials should be just as vigilant when it comes to cocaine, meth and other prescription and illicit drugs of abuse in their communities.

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