[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 75 (Thursday, May 12, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2738-S2739]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OPIOID CRISIS
Mr. MARKEY. Mr. President, I wish to open my remarks with a
congratulations to the Police Assisted Addiction and Recovery
Initiative based in Gloucester, MA.
Since it began less than 11 months ago, this program is now
partnering with more than 100 police departments in 24 States around
the country to help people with opioid addiction to get the treatment
they need. The program's approach is simple, but it is also
revolutionary: having law enforcement work with those suffering from
the disease of addiction by removing the stigma surrounding it and
placing them into treatment instead of behind bars.
I thank the founders of this program--Gloucester police chief Leonard
Campanello and John Rosenthal--for their leadership and compassion, and
I urge everyone to learn more about this national model for combating
the opioid crisis.
It is that crisis that I am here to talk about this afternoon. Today,
I wish to call attention to a serious issue facing Massachusetts and
soon to face every single community in the United States of America.
Illicit fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is 50 times stronger than
heroin. Let me say that again. Fentanyl is 50 times stronger than
heroin and 100 times more powerful than morphine. It is responsible for
the largest increase in drug overdose deaths in recent years.
More than 700 deaths in the United States were attributable to
fentanyl and its components between 2013 and 2014. In Massachusetts
alone, 336 people died from fentanyl-related overdoses between 2014 and
2015. More recently, among the 1,319 opioid-related deaths in the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 2015 for which a blood test was
available, more than half--754--tested positive for fentanyl. That is
an astounding number for one State. That is an astounding increase in
the impact that fentanyl is having in deaths in the State of
Massachusetts.
But it is not just isolated to Massachusetts, because fentanyl is the
Godzilla of opioids, and it will overrun communities and lay them to
waste unless we take action now to stop it.
For those who may not know about this new scourge, Mexico and China
are the primary foreign sources for illicit fentanyl, for the chemicals
and building blocks from which it is made, and for other illicit
substances very similar to fentanyl--called fentanyl analogs--and which
are trafficked into the United States from outside of our borders.
Fentanyl powder is often mixed with other illicit drugs like heroin or
is disguised in pill form to resemble an opioid painkiller like
OxyContin.
Many drug users overdose on fentanyl because they have no idea that
it is mixed into whatever substance they are injecting or whatever
pills they are swallowing, and they do not realize just how deadly it
is until it is too late.
But capturing a total and accurate number of drug overdoses caused by
fentanyl has been very challenging.
[[Page S2739]]
Coroners and medical examiners do not usually test for the drug unless
they are asked to, and they are often unaware that an overdose has a
fentanyl link when an individual tests positive for a different
substance such as heroin.
Even more troubling, the men and the women who first respond to the
scene of an overdose may not know how to identify fentanyl or how to
handle the drug. This makes local and State first responders very
vulnerable to the drug's harmful effects, because if the fentanyl
powder is absorbed into the skin or accidentally inhaled, it can be
deadly. In fact, a dose of just three salt-sized grains of fentanyl can
be lethal.
So think about that. You are a first responder. You are going into a
home or a business thinking that you are responding to an opioid
overdose situation when, in fact, you might be exposing yourself to the
fentanyl in the air or to something which gets on your skin. That is
how deadly this new substance is that is creating this epidemic across
our country.
Recently, DEA agents in Seattle raided a suspected fentanyl lab
wearing HAZMAT suits and protective gear to make sure they did not
inadvertently breathe in or touch the fentanyl. The DEA has told me
that they sometimes cannot use dogs to sniff packages coming in from
overseas suspected of containing fentanyl because these drug-detection
dogs may die if they even inhale it.
The Drug Enforcement Administration is so concerned about this
synthetic opioid that in March of 2015 it issued a nationwide alert
highlighting fentanyl as a threat to health and public safety.
Fentanyl is a very real problem in my home State of Massachusetts.
Lawrence, MA, which is about half an hour north of Boston, is a hotspot
for fentanyl trafficking. From Lawrence, the drug ends up being
processed and sold all over New England.
There are efforts already in place to address the spread of fentanyl.
Mexico and China are its primary foreign sources and have been the
focus of diplomatic efforts to curb fentanyl trafficking. We need to
make sure that those countries are living up to their promises to
combat the flow of this deadly drug and other synthetic opioids into
the United States.
We know naloxone, sometimes called Narcan, is an effective antidote
against an opioid overdose. But a single dose of naloxone is typically
not enough to combat an overdose that includes fentanyl.
That is why earlier today I called on the Department of Health and
Human Services and the Department of State to outline our domestic and
international strategy against the trafficking of illicit fentanyl into
America. As we await their responses, I know there are several critical
steps that we must take in order to save lives.
We must educate the public about the existence of illicit fentanyl
and the harm it can do.
We must educate first responders--our firefighters, our EMTs, our
sheriffs, our health care workers--so that they can protect against
injury to themselves as they are trying to identify a fentanyl overdose
and so that they can protect themselves from the harmful effects of
that drug.
Identifying a fentanyl overdose could mean the difference between
administering multiple lifesaving doses of naloxone or death.
We should invest in programs that ensure that naloxone--Narcan--is
readily available and accessible to those most likely to witness an
overdose. We need to make sure that there are no shortages or
unnecessary price increases for this lifesaving treatment.
We should issue guidance to States regarding the protocol for
fentanyl testing in order to obtain a more accurate picture of
fentanyl's deadly impact.
Illicit fentanyl is different from other opioids. It is difficult to
detect and has deadly consequences for those who unknowingly come
within its path. We cannot let another day pass without taking the
necessary steps to educate our communities about fentanyl, to develop a
national strategy, and to collaborate with our international partners--
the Mexicans and the Chinese, especially--so that we can keep this
illicit drug out of the cities and towns all over our country.
American lives depend on a solution to the latest opioid crisis. It
is going to be something that people look back at and say: How can
something have been worse than the heroin epidemic? How can something
have caused more deaths than the heroin epidemic? That is where
fentanyl is already in the State of Massachusetts. It is something that
is going to come to each and every State in our country.
We have to take action now. We have to ensure that we protect our
borders from it entering, but then we have to make sure that we give
the proper training and protections and put them in place for every
State and every city and town to be able to protect against this
infecting our communities.
So I thank the Chair for giving me the opportunity to address the
Chamber today.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cassidy). The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SASSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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