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Social Alarming rise in 'zombie drug' deaths in America as White House reveals action plan

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Sometimes mixed with fentanyl, xylazine - often referred to as Tranq - has spread across the US at an alarming speed and has devastated communities. In May, the first death linked to the drug was announced in the UK.

By Mark Stone

New figures show a shocking rise in deaths on US streets linked to a drug which rots the skin of those who use it.

Xylazine, often referred to as Tranq or the zombie drug, has spread across America at such alarming speed that the White House has now released a new six-point action plan to tackle the crisis.

resident-evil-village-psvr2-02-696x392.jpg


The drug, an animal tranquillizer, is increasingly mixed or "cut" by drug dealers into supplies of fentanyl which itself is already killing over 100,000 Americans every year.

According to the most recent data from 20 US states and the District of Columbia, the monthly percentage of fentanyl-associated deaths where xylazine was detected has increased from 2.9% to 10.9% - a jump of 276%.

Revealing the new figures and announcing the action plan, Dr Raul Gupta, the White House director of national drug control policy, said: "This administration recognises the grave threat that fentanyl combined with xylazine presents to our nation."

The latest numbers are stark, shocking and suggest that the skin-rotting animal tranquiliser is now firmly established in America's drug market.

In the 12 months ending in January, 109,000 Americans died from a drug overdose. Nearly seven in ten of those deaths were attributed to synthetic opioids like fentanyl and a growing number were linked to xylazine.

The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) has seized xylazine-fentanyl mixtures in 48 of the 50 US states. And according to the DEA laboratories, in 2022, 23% of fentanyl powder and 7% of fentanyl tablets contained xylazine.

Spelling out the scale of the crisis, Dr Gupta said:
"As a physician, I've never seen one this bad, at this scale… I visited the wound care clinic in Kensington neighbourhood of Philadelphia, one of the hardest hit communities in the nation."

He added: "So what I want everyone to understand is this: if we thought fentanyl was dangerous, fentanyl combined with xylazine is even deadlier."

d9aa1dac214c2c417112025494669c81a8-hunter-biden.jpg



The streets of Philadelphia

In March, Sky News revealed the scale of the xylazine crisis in the northeastern city of Philadelphia, where the drug cocktail first emerged, with a report that exposed the true cost of America's evolving drug challenge.

On block after block in the Kensington district we saw people suffering from addiction who were increasingly finding their opioid supply was being cut by dealers with xylazine.

We saw the open wounds, the rotting skin and the volunteer outreach workers overwhelmed by the scale of the challenge.

Speaking to Sky News four months since we visited, one of the volunteers we met said the situation is now much worse.

"The hospitals can't keep the patients comfortable - because of their addiction - to keep them long enough to get the wounds under control," Ronnie Kaiser told me.

When the wounds caused by the xylazine get to a certain stage, the user may either admit themselves to the hospital or be taken to hospital. But their urge for another 'hit' will often be greater than the recognition that the wounds need to be treated. It is a cruel and vicious cycle of addiction.

"There's always new people and sadly some we've seen for years and, of course, there's some who passed." Ronnie said.

The White House six-point plan

According to Neera Tanden, the domestic policy adviser at the White House, the new six-point plan seeks to: "Aggressively expand access to prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery support for those with substance use disorders. And [take] bold actions to disrupt the supply of illicit drugs, especially fentanyl that is harming communities or all across the country."

The plan, released on Tuesday, focuses on six pillars of action: testing, data collection, evidence-based prevention, harm reduction/treatment, supply reduction, scheduling (categorising the drug) and research.

The White House's drug policy director, Dr Gupta said: "We're calling on Congress to fully fund President Biden's historic $46.1bn (£35.7bn) budget request for national drug control programs, including key funding to address illicit fentanyl and emerging threats like xylazine."

skynews-philadelphia-tranq_6214997.jpg

Ronnie, who runs the Philadelphia-based charity Angels in Motion, speaking to Sky News earlier in 2023

The reaction on the streets

Ronnie, who runs the Philadelphia-based charity Angels in Motion, welcomed the fact that the federal government was finally recognising the scale of the crisis.

"Perhaps awareness is there now. It's good that solutions are being looked at," she said.

But she questioned the practicalities of the proposals: "Test strips? Why? Do they think the dealer will take the bag [of drugs] back if it comes up positive?!"

"We need more help with prevention, harm reduction, rehab and recovery houses - these should be the absolute solution now!" she said.

"Those of us on the ground know that these are the things needed. Unfortunately, I think funding goes to certain people, not so much to the boots on the ground."

She pointed to the perennial American problem of medical insurance and the 'for profit' medical facilities. Even those living on the streets and suffering from addiction are required to navigate the country's complex health system if they are to stand a real chance of recovery.

"We need federal rehabs, federal recovery houses, the ability for longer rehab stays and definitely all insurances to be accepted at all rehabs," she said.

"That's what we need so that all 'for profit' places go away. There are recovery houses that are so bad - throwing people out because they can't find a job to pay fast enough."

Too late for America

In February, Philadelphia's substance use prevention and harm reduction chief, Dr Andrew Best, warned that cities across America should brace for xylazine and called on the federal government to do more.

"Right now there's no state or federal funding available," he told Sky News. "I don't want this to spread to other cities."

The new data shows it's too late, and in May the first UK death linked to xylaxine was announced.

The Biden administration has also announced plans to disrupt the supply of both fentanyl and xylazine into the country. The precursor products come from China and are mostly converted to tablet or powder form by cartels in Mexico as Sky News exposed earlier this year.

The fear now, given the ever-growing supply of xylazine-adulterated fentanyl, is that it will infiltrate other sectors of society.

In May, Sky News saw how small-town communities were struggling with accidental fentanyl overdoses by children in schools.

https://news.sky.com/story/alarming-rise-in-zombie-drug-deaths-in-america-as-white-house-reveals-action-plan-12918861
 
I have no sympathy for people who take shit like this. Addicts are people I stopped sympathizing with in general years ago.
 
I have no sympathy for people who take shit like this. Addicts are people I stopped sympathizing with in general years ago.

Plenty of them get hooked because medical professionals prescribe them such powerful shit. Then they are addicted and can't get the prescription stuff anymore so turn to street drugs. It's not all addicts obviously but it's plenty of them.

But now they are straight up playing Russian Roulette every time they use because of the shit that's put into the street drugs. Someone who maybe would have eventually kicked the habit and had a good life just OD's and dies.

Shit is a problem, a massive one. I live in a pretty affluent suburb and this stuff has crept out here too. It's not "someone else's problem", it's gonna affect all of us.
 
Plenty of them get hooked because medical professionals prescribe them such powerful shit. Then they are addicted and can't get the prescription stuff anymore so turn to street drugs. It's not all addicts obviously but it's plenty of them.

But now they are straight up playing Russian Roulette every time they use because of the shit that's put into the street drugs. Someone who maybe would have eventually kicked the habit and had a good life just OD's and dies.

Shit is a problem, a massive one. I live in a pretty affluent suburb and this stuff has crept out here too. It's not "someone else's problem", it's gonna affect all of us.
eh, its just people who like to get high more than they like any other aspect of their life. I've been around my share of addicts and stopped being fooled by their sob stories a long time ago.
 
Prescription pain killers are probably hard to force people off of. If someone has a legitimate need for them, and that need goes away, how do you know as a doctor? They just complain that they are in pain, even if they aren't, or they associate withdrawal with the exaggerated and lingering pain of their condition. You could institutionalize people and occasionally torture them to see who is faking pain and who isn't, but I don't think that is what we want to do either. We could give anyone who wants it a clean drip of the drug for as long as they want. Just make it a supplement.
 
eh, its just people who like to get high more than they like any other aspect of their life. I've been around my share of addicts and stopped being fooled by their sob stories a long time ago.

Imagine there is an unlimited supply of fresh and clean drugs. What's the problem with just giving the stuff to them? Who cares if some people are high?
 
eh, its just people who like to get high more than they like any other aspect of their life. I've been around my share of addicts and stopped being fooled by their sob stories a long time ago.

I mean...that's a broad brush. Addiction is...addiction. Some people can overcome it through sheer will but many can't. Brain chemistries vary, everyone isn't physiologically the same. I'd rather not have communities go to shit because we sit around and say "Those people need to just sack up and stop using." Even if you have zero sympathy for them, it creates a shit ton of problems for the rest of us.
 
Sometimes mixed with fentanyl, xylazine - often referred to as Tranq - has spread across the US at an alarming speed and has devastated communities. In May, the first death linked to the drug was announced in the UK.

By Mark Stone

New figures show a shocking rise in deaths on US streets linked to a drug which rots the skin of those who use it.

Xylazine, often referred to as Tranq or the zombie drug, has spread across America at such alarming speed that the White House has now released a new six-point action plan to tackle the crisis.

resident-evil-village-psvr2-02-696x392.jpg


The drug, an animal tranquillizer, is increasingly mixed or "cut" by drug dealers into supplies of fentanyl which itself is already killing over 100,000 Americans every year.

According to the most recent data from 20 US states and the District of Columbia, the monthly percentage of fentanyl-associated deaths where xylazine was detected has increased from 2.9% to 10.9% - a jump of 276%.

Revealing the new figures and announcing the action plan, Dr Raul Gupta, the White House director of national drug control policy, said: "This administration recognises the grave threat that fentanyl combined with xylazine presents to our nation."

The latest numbers are stark, shocking and suggest that the skin-rotting animal tranquiliser is now firmly established in America's drug market.

In the 12 months ending in January, 109,000 Americans died from a drug overdose. Nearly seven in ten of those deaths were attributed to synthetic opioids like fentanyl and a growing number were linked to xylazine.

The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) has seized xylazine-fentanyl mixtures in 48 of the 50 US states. And according to the DEA laboratories, in 2022, 23% of fentanyl powder and 7% of fentanyl tablets contained xylazine.

Spelling out the scale of the crisis, Dr Gupta said:
"As a physician, I've never seen one this bad, at this scale… I visited the wound care clinic in Kensington neighbourhood of Philadelphia, one of the hardest hit communities in the nation."

He added: "So what I want everyone to understand is this: if we thought fentanyl was dangerous, fentanyl combined with xylazine is even deadlier."

d9aa1dac214c2c417112025494669c81a8-hunter-biden.jpg



The streets of Philadelphia

In March, Sky News revealed the scale of the xylazine crisis in the northeastern city of Philadelphia, where the drug cocktail first emerged, with a report that exposed the true cost of America's evolving drug challenge.

On block after block in the Kensington district we saw people suffering from addiction who were increasingly finding their opioid supply was being cut by dealers with xylazine.

We saw the open wounds, the rotting skin and the volunteer outreach workers overwhelmed by the scale of the challenge.

Speaking to Sky News four months since we visited, one of the volunteers we met said the situation is now much worse.

"The hospitals can't keep the patients comfortable - because of their addiction - to keep them long enough to get the wounds under control," Ronnie Kaiser told me.

When the wounds caused by the xylazine get to a certain stage, the user may either admit themselves to the hospital or be taken to hospital. But their urge for another 'hit' will often be greater than the recognition that the wounds need to be treated. It is a cruel and vicious cycle of addiction.

"There's always new people and sadly some we've seen for years and, of course, there's some who passed." Ronnie said.

The White House six-point plan

According to Neera Tanden, the domestic policy adviser at the White House, the new six-point plan seeks to: "Aggressively expand access to prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery support for those with substance use disorders. And [take] bold actions to disrupt the supply of illicit drugs, especially fentanyl that is harming communities or all across the country."

The plan, released on Tuesday, focuses on six pillars of action: testing, data collection, evidence-based prevention, harm reduction/treatment, supply reduction, scheduling (categorising the drug) and research.

The White House's drug policy director, Dr Gupta said: "We're calling on Congress to fully fund President Biden's historic $46.1bn (£35.7bn) budget request for national drug control programs, including key funding to address illicit fentanyl and emerging threats like xylazine."

skynews-philadelphia-tranq_6214997.jpg

Ronnie, who runs the Philadelphia-based charity Angels in Motion, speaking to Sky News earlier in 2023

The reaction on the streets

Ronnie, who runs the Philadelphia-based charity Angels in Motion, welcomed the fact that the federal government was finally recognising the scale of the crisis.

"Perhaps awareness is there now. It's good that solutions are being looked at," she said.

But she questioned the practicalities of the proposals: "Test strips? Why? Do they think the dealer will take the bag [of drugs] back if it comes up positive?!"

"We need more help with prevention, harm reduction, rehab and recovery houses - these should be the absolute solution now!" she said.

"Those of us on the ground know that these are the things needed. Unfortunately, I think funding goes to certain people, not so much to the boots on the ground."

She pointed to the perennial American problem of medical insurance and the 'for profit' medical facilities. Even those living on the streets and suffering from addiction are required to navigate the country's complex health system if they are to stand a real chance of recovery.

"We need federal rehabs, federal recovery houses, the ability for longer rehab stays and definitely all insurances to be accepted at all rehabs," she said.

"That's what we need so that all 'for profit' places go away. There are recovery houses that are so bad - throwing people out because they can't find a job to pay fast enough."

Too late for America

In February, Philadelphia's substance use prevention and harm reduction chief, Dr Andrew Best, warned that cities across America should brace for xylazine and called on the federal government to do more.

"Right now there's no state or federal funding available," he told Sky News. "I don't want this to spread to other cities."

The new data shows it's too late, and in May the first UK death linked to xylaxine was announced.

The Biden administration has also announced plans to disrupt the supply of both fentanyl and xylazine into the country. The precursor products come from China and are mostly converted to tablet or powder form by cartels in Mexico as Sky News exposed earlier this year.

The fear now, given the ever-growing supply of xylazine-adulterated fentanyl, is that it will infiltrate other sectors of society.

In May, Sky News saw how small-town communities were struggling with accidental fentanyl overdoses by children in schools.

https://news.sky.com/story/alarming-rise-in-zombie-drug-deaths-in-america-as-white-house-reveals-action-plan-12918861
A little more green in there would be nice
 
I mean...that's a broad brush. Addiction is...addiction. Some people can overcome it through sheer will but many can't. Brain chemistries vary, everyone isn't physiologically the same. I'd rather not have communities go to shit because we sit around and say "Those people need to just sack up and stop using." Even if you have zero sympathy for them, it creates a shit ton of problems for the rest of us.
Like I said, I've been around addicts and they make their choices. I don't make them for them and I won't feel any sympathy for people that deliberately destroy their own lives. I'm tired of society catering to the lowest common denominator.
Every time one shoots up or snorts some pills, you've made the choice to do so. Its what they decided was most important. Drugs aren't just in the air and some unfortunate few absorb it into their system unknowingly. They destroy their lives knowingly then pull the "its a disease!" card to make you feel guilty and take up the slack for them, dragging everyone down with them in the process.
 
Like I said, I've been around addicts and they make their choices. I don't make them for them and I won't feel any sympathy for people that deliberately destroy their own lives. I'm tired of society catering to the lowest common denominator.
Every time one shoots up or snorts some pills, you've made the choice to do so. Its what they decided was most important. Drugs aren't just in the air and some unfortunate few absorb it into their system unknowingly. They destroy their lives knowingly then pull the "its a disease!" card to make you feel guilty and take up the slack for them, dragging everyone down with them in the process.

I mean, I don't fully agree with this (although in some cases I think you're right) but that's not really the whole issue anyway. Whoever you want to "blame", the shit is still happening and it doesn't only affect addicts. It affects their families, whole communities, etc. Places become run down shitholes that nobody would ever want to set foot in. It ruins neighborhood and cities. I'd rather try to be proactive, and I'd think even someone like you who has zero sympathy for the actual addicts wouldn't want everyone else to suffer because of them.
 
Ahhh... You sure about that?



Like 20 years ago I took my girlfriend to Daytona Beach. We made a mistake of going for a walk, turned one street in from the hotels, and it was on its way to that. Just people fucking standing around, not socializing or moving. Just standing.
 
Hard to feel sorry for them, they chose to do it. Same with the idiots doing these tiktok challenges. Stupid is as stupid does.......
 
Like 20 years ago I took my girlfriend to Daytona Beach. We made a mistake of going for a walk, turned one street in from the hotels, and it was on its way to that. Just people fucking standing around, not socializing or moving. Just standing.

Downtown Tiajuana is nicer and safer place to hang out than Philadephia these days.
 
I have some addict uncles. To be honest, it's to the point where I wish they'd just OD and die. Fuck em
 

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