As fentanyl-related overdoses are continuing to rise across Tennessee and the broader Appalachian region, increased attention is being paid to how illicit fentanyl is being mixed into other substances without the consumer's knowledge. ReVIDAยฎ Recovery, an outpatient provider specializing in opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment in Johnson City and surrounding communities, has published a new educational guide examining all of the chemicals that fentanyl is commonly cut with, why this practice is expanding, and how it makes a major contribution to overdose risk across the region.
โFentanyl is a synthetic (man-made in a lab) opioid thatโs FDA-approved for the treatment of severe pain. Doctors will prescribe this medication for short periods to manage post-surgical pain, but it isnโt a medication thatโs prescribed for the long term,โ the article explains. โAnyone who takes fentanyl for long periods risks forming a physical and mental dependency on it.โ When taken legally, fentanyl can appear as lozenges, nasal sprays, transdermal patches, or sublingual tablets. Illicitly, however, it is more often found in pill or powder form and is commonly crushed, dissolved, or injected. Because fentanyl is estimated to be 50 to 100 times stronger than any other opioids, even just small amounts can significantly increase an overdose risk โ particularly when individuals are unaware it is present.
According to ReVIDAยฎ Recovery, the growing practice of mixing fentanyl into other illicit substances has made overdose prevention increasingly more difficult. The organizationโs educational resource outlines how fentanyl is often combined with heroin, counterfeit pills, and even other opioids to increase both its potency and the dealerโs supply. This practice significantly raises the risk of accidental exposure, particularly for individuals who believe they are consuming a different substance altogether. Because fentanyl is so potent in small quantities, even minor variations in how it is mixed can result in unpredictable and dangerous outcomes, complicating both public health response efforts and individual risk awareness.
The article notes. โLast year, 70,000 overdose deaths were attributed to fentanyl. A large reason for this is that, when people are taking it illicitly, they donโt know whatโs in it.โ When fentanyl is combined with other opioids, as the article explains, potency increases in incredibly unpredictable ways โ making dosage estimation extremely difficult. Reported signs of overdose associated with fentanyl exposure include gurgling noises, slowed or difficult breathing, blue discoloration of lips or under the eyes, pale skin, vomiting, sweating, unpredictable somnolence, coma, or sudden loss of consciousness.
Public health experts have emphasized that the continued spread of fentanyl into the illicit drug supply represents a long-term challenge for communities nationwide. As fentanyl mixing becomes more and more common, education around substances, overdose risk, and treatment access is increasingly viewed as a needed component of harm reduction and response strategies. ReVIDAยฎ Recovery reports that greater public awareness of how fentanyl is distributed and consumed could tremendously help reduce accidental exposure and encourage earlier engagement with evidence-based treatment services.
About ReVIDAยฎ Recovery
ReVIDAยฎ Recovery is an outpatient medication-assisted treatment (MAT) provider that specializes exclusively in opioid use disorder. With locations across East Tennessee and Western Virginia, ReVIDAยฎ Recovery offers MAT services using Suboxoneยฎ and Sublocadeยฎ, combined with required outpatient therapy and practical support services. The organization is committed to expanding access to evidence-based care while helping patients stabilize and maintain daily responsibilities.
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For more information about ReVIDAยฎ Recovery Johnson City, contact the company here:
ReVIDAยฎ Recovery Johnson City
Leah Wilcher
423-631-0432
generalinfo@revidarecovery.com
3114 Browns Mill Road,
Johnson City, TN, 37604
