In West Virginia and elsewhere, dealers mix fentanyl with the powerful animal sedative xylazine. NBC News was able to arrange overseas purchases of the drug within minutes.

Dr. Steven Corder didn’t think his job treating people addicted to fentanyl in Wheeling, West Virginia, could get any harder, but then he began encountering patients who were addicted to both fentanyl and a second drug with its own destructive power — the livestock tranquilizer xylazine.

“Opioid withdrawal is hard enough,” Corder said. But his usual tools, he lamented, “couldn’t touch the withdrawal from xylazine.”

Xylazine is now present in one out of every nine overdose deaths nationwide involving illicit fentanyl, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    • @Fades
      link
      1411 months ago

      You are disgusting, clearly risk of death alone does not keep people from resorting to it, so no this is not the way it would end.

      How naive, hateful, and small-minded can you be? They are people just like you.

      • @oldbaldgrumpy
        link
        -3611 months ago

        Apparently the junkie could die. Stopping the demand part of supply and demand.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          1611 months ago

          Yes. And absolutely NO ONE ELSE will ever become addicted to opiates ever again.

          Do you think before you talk?

          • @Crashumbc
            link
            English
            -1
            edit-2
            11 months ago

            Do you?

            You’re responding to an obvious troll…

        • littleblue✨
          link
          1111 months ago

          Oooh, a wild edgelord appears. Much wow. (Try not to suck your own dick in public, cupcake.)