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Skin-Rotting Drug Infiltrates Big Cities: ‘Zombifying Bodies’

There’s a new drug in town — and it has deadly consequences.

Xylazine — otherwise known as “tranq,” “tranq dope” and “zombie drug” — is wreaking havoc in major cities across the country with its devastating effects: It can literally rot the user’s skin.

The substance, which seemed to first appear in Philadelphia before migrating west to San Francisco and Los Angeles, was used for cutting heroin, but, most recently, it has been discovered in fentanyl and other illicit drugs.

While approved by the Food and Drug Administration for veterinary use, xylazine, a non-opioid, is not safe for humans, and those who overdose on the drug do not respond to naloxone, or Narcan, the most common overdose reversal treatment.

Xylazine causes sedative-like symptoms, such as excessive sleepiness and respiratory depression, as well as raw wounds that can become severe and spread rapidly with repeated exposure. The crusty ulcerations, which can become dead skin called eschar, can result in amputation if left untreated. (Read more from “Skin-Rotting Drug Infiltrates Big Cities: ‘Zombifying Bodies'” HERE)

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New Study: Drugs Caused DOUBLE the Official Death Count in 2016

Just how bad is the drug crisis? A new study finds that when all direct and indirect harms of drug use are factored in, the real number of drug-related fatalities in 2016 was 141,695, 2.2 times the official tally of drug-coded deaths (63,600) published by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

The study, funded by the University of Pennsylvania and Georgetown University, found that by examining the increase in midlife mortality relative to the expected baseline decrease that should have continued between 2010 and 2016, one can conclude that 141,695 people aged 15-65 lost their lives early in 2016 due to drug use.

“In the absence of drug use, we estimate that the probability of dying between ages 15 and 65 would have continued to decline after 2010 among men (from 16.2% in 2010 to 15.4% in 2016) and would have remained at a low level (9.9% in 2010, 10.0% in 2016) among women,” write co-authors Dana A. Glei and Samuel H. Preston. Glei and Preston are both professors of sociology and demography at Princeton University who have written extensively about mortality trends.

While the CDC estimates 63,000 drug fatalities in 2016, those are the people found dead as the result of an immediate drug overdose, as reported by state toxicology reports. Glei and Preston write that “in addition to its direct effect on deaths from poisoning, drug use may inflate mortality resulting from infectious diseases, respiratory diseases, external causes, mental/behavioral disorders, digestive diseases, circulatory diseases, and neoplasms.” Suicide is also a big factor in many deaths that are not reported as drug-related but are indirectly caused by drug addiction.

The impetus for studying decreased life expectancy as a whole, rather than limiting the scope of research on drug deaths to toxicology reports on drug poisoning, stems from the shockingly sad government and private reports showing life expectancy sliding backward in recent years due to the drug crisis. According to a 2018 report by the National Center for Health Statistics, life expectancy declined from 78.9 years for those born in 2014 to 78.7 years in 2015, then decreased again between 2016 and 2017 to the current 78.6 years. That is simply astounding given the advancement of medical technology. It’s the first time life expectancy rates have declined since the outbreak of the influenza epidemic during World War I.

In addition to drug poisoning deaths skyrocketing, deaths due to suicide and liver disease are also on the rise, which lends credence to the premise that the rising tide of drug addiction is likely increasing other illnesses and suicide. Rises in midlife mortality rates, according to Reuters, were most acute in New Hampshire, 23.3%; West Virginia, 23.0%; Ohio, 21.6%; Maine, 20.7%; Vermont; 19.9%, Indiana; 14.8% and Kentucky, 14.7%; These are all states that top the list of drug overdose crisis states.

Using elaborate statistical modeling, the authors of this new study conclude: “In terms of life expectancy beyond age 15, we estimate that drug use cost men 1.4 years and women 0.7 years, on average. In the hardest-hit state (West Virginia), drug use cost men 3.6 and women 1.9 life years.”

The only other study that attempted to quantify drug-associated deaths, in addition to drug-coded deaths, was a Finland research paper. It concluded that total number of drug-associated deaths at ages 15–64 was actually 2.8 times the number of drug-coded deaths, an even higher ratio than what was estimated by this study.

According to this study, in one single year there are likely as many deaths in this country with drugs as a contributing factor as there are deaths from strokes, the fifth leading cause of death in America.

As I’ve reported before, the data suggests that the overwhelming number of fatalities are the result of illicit drugs brought in by the Mexican drug cartels, not from chronic pain patients overdosing on prescription drugs. Yet the entirety of the public policy response has focused on clamping down even further on prescription painkillers, often resulting in the worst of all worlds, as legitimate pain patients suffer while no progress is made against the real culprit. Meanwhile, the amalgamation of dramatically reducing penalties for drug trafficking, inviting in a massive border surge, and the advent of sanctuary cities protecting illegal alien criminals, such as drug traffickers, has aggravated the problem substantially.

As the body count continues to mount, our policymakers might want to focus more on the source of the supply problem rather than just throwing more money at rapacious NGOs for “treatment” and declaring war on pain medication, leaving some people with no option other than dangerous street heroin. (For more from the author of “New Study: Drugs Caused Double the Official Death Count in 2016” please click HERE)

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How One Veteran Is Using His Experience Overcoming Addiction to Help Other Veterans

U.S. Marine Corps veteran Frank Britton is using his personal experience to help other veterans overcome substance abuse and find employment.

Britton, 60, has gone through several relapses over the past three decades but has been clean for more than four years after receiving support from the nonprofit organization Easterseals, which provides services to people with disabilities and helps veterans transition back into their communities after receiving treatment for drug use or other traumas. . .

But despite the honor that comes with carrying a military title, Britton said he feels for the veterans who can’t get the help they need after coming home from war, especially those who fought in Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq.

“These guys, when they come home, they’re not getting the help they need to endure what they went through,” he told the DCNF. That’s part of the reason so many veterans suffer from addiction, especially now while the opioid crisis is sweeping through the country.

More than 130 people died of an opioid overdose every day in the U.S. in 2017, amounting to more than 47,000 deaths from opioid overdoses that year, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) citing 2018 data from Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). (Read more from “How One Veteran Is Using His Experience Overcoming Addiction to Help Other Veterans” HERE)

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Video of a Mom High on Opioids With Young Daughter in Car Will Shake You to the Core

A gut-wrenching video has emerged showing a woman seemingly high on opioids slurring her words as she attempts to drive her hungry daughter for food.

The disturbing footage, which surfaced Wednesday on LiveLeak, appears be filmed by one of the unidentified woman’s daughters who is sitting in the passenger’s seat. The young girl can be heard telling her mom, “I’m ready,” before handing her the car keys. The woman looks to be barely conscious, responding in mumbling sentences that are difficult to decipher.

The young girl later tells her mother that “my belly’s groaning at me,” before handing her what appears to be a $20 bill. The mother slurs her words again before passing out mid-sentence in the driver’s seat.

After temporarily passing out, the woman wakes back up and says, “Look I’m tired, alright, I’m trying Destiny.” She then rants that she’s “a fucking single mom,” with “a boyfriend who’s fucking breaking up with me.” . . .

Police arrested a mother and father in Indiana March 9 after the parents suffered heroin overdoses in their SUV with their three children inside. The parents, 31-year-old Adam Smith and 29-year-old Donnis Smith, were found unresponsive in their car. (Read more from “Video of a Mom High on Opioids With Young Daughter in Car Will Shake You to the Core” HERE)

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