Cincinnati sees estimated 78 heroin overdoses in 2 days

Elephant tranquilizer blamed for recent wave of heroin overdoses

CINCINNATI -- Cincinnati police are asking for the public’s help in trying to identify the source of the suspected heroin behind an estimated 78 overdoses in just two days.

Heroin in the Heartland

Meanwhile, Hamilton County officials say they will seek funding for treatment and expanded response teams.

County officials are calling the latest onslaught of overdose cases a public health emergency, and county Health Commissioner Tim Ingram says the number of emergency-room incidents over the last six days was “unprecedented.”

Emergency rooms estimate they had 174 suspected opioid overdose cases this week, including three deaths. Last year, accidental drug overdoses killed 3,050 people in Ohio, an average of eight per day, state officials say.

Addict describes overdosing on carfentanil

Cincinnati City Manager Harry Black said authorities suspect carfentanil, a drug used to sedate elephants and other large animals, may be mixed in with heroin and causing the overdoses. The drug is 100 times more potent than fentanyl, which is suspected in spates of overdoses in several states.

Last month, carfentanil was discovered in the Cincinnati area’s heroin stream, but many hospitals don’t have the equipment to test blood for the previously uncommon animal opioid.

The treatment drug Narcan can be used to save people who overdose on carfentanil -- if they get enough, CBS News correspondent Anna Werner reports.

“How much more Narcan do you need to save a person who took carfentanil as opposed to heroin or heroin and fentanyl?” Werner asked Dr. Nick Jouriles with Akron General Hospital.

“It starts at five times the amount,” Jouriles told her.

Frightening overdose rates fueled by deadly heroin-fentanyl mix

He said it’s the most powerful drug he has seen people taking through heroin use.

Hamilton County Commissioner Dennis Deters said Thursday the expanded teams would include a law enforcement officer, an emergency responder and a specialist who could treat people who’ve overdosed. He said the cost of the beefed-up program hasn’t been determined yet.

Nan Franks of the Addiction Services Council of Cincinnati noted that Cincinnati currently doesn’t have enough places to treat the rising number of drug users who seek help.

“People overwhelmingly want help,” she said. “But we have to have a place to take them.”

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