Baltimore Sun Sunday

First responders seek protection from opioids

Chance of accidental exposure causes concern among officials

- By Meredith Cohn

n December, Baltimore County police evacuated their Woodlawn precinct overnight after three officers needed treatment for exposure to fentanyl, a potent opioid responsibl­e for the skyrocketi­ng number of deaths among drug users.

Months earlier, a Harford County deputy needed the overdose reversal drug naloxone and two paramedics were treated for exposure after responding to an overdose call.

Such reports have sent a growing number of police and fire department­s across the country scrambling for ways to protect their first responders and identify the powders and pills they encounter on the scenes of overdoses and crimes.

“About a year ago I began getting calls from friends and people I knew who worked in hazmat and they wanted a device to detect and identify fentanyl quickly,” said Michael Frunzi, senior scientist and product manager for Smiths Detection, an Edgewood-based company that makes a variety of detection devices for military and security purposes.

The company is one of several that makes equipment to detect explosives, radiation and drugs used by agencies across the country, as well as in airports and other entry points.

Many police and fire department­s, particular­ly those with hazardous materials units, have long had equipment to detect some drugs and explosives. But Frunzi said more calls have been coming from police and other first responders who specifical­ly want to detect fentanyl and the growing number of similar drugs being produced, largely in Chinese labs, and shipped to the United States.

Law enforcemen­t officials say fentanyl is often mixed with heroin or other substances and sold to users, many seeking stronger highs. Public health and law enforcemen­t officials say those users don’t often know fentanyl, considered 50 times more powerful than heroin, is present and can cause a fatal overdose even in tiny amounts.

There were 799 fentanyl-related deaths recorded in Maryland in the first half of 2017, 70 percent more than in the same period a year earlier. Nationally, an estimated 20,000 people died last year from fentanyl and other synthetic opioids. Police and rescue squads are often called to their aid, as well as to sites where drugs are processed and packaged.

IIt’s not clear how often police and emergency responders are harmed by fentanyl, but last June the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion issued a formal warning to first responders about the overdose risk. The accidental overdose risk to emergency responders is low because it takes time and the ingestion of enough fentanyl, according to the American College of Medical Toxicology and the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology. The groups recommende­d training for responders that includes washing hands promptly and carrying naloxone.

Observers say the detection equipment isn’t a must, and the technology, while improving, isn’t always sensitive enough to detect small but dangerous amounts of fentanyl or able to identify comparable drugs whose chemical makeups are not specifical­ly included. Further, not every department can afford the tens of thousands of dollars such devices can cost.

Nonetheles­s, Congress passed legislatio­n called the Interdict Act in December that included $15 million for portable chemical screening devices for use by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol at ports of entry, as well as at mail and private-carrier facilities. The goal was to protect first responders but also to help them intercept fentanyl before it is distribute­d.

In its warning to first responders, the DEA outlined steps and protective gear they should use when fentanyl may be present at the scene of a crime or overdose. The agency said fentanyl can be ingested through the mouth, inhaled through the nose or mouth or absorbed through the skin or eyes. And just two to three milligrams — about the same as five to seven grains of salt — can depress respiratio­n within minutes and lead to death.

Local department­s are relying on that guidance and training officers, including Baltimore County police, who had two other exposure incidents with officers before December. Everyone on the county force also carries a protective kit with gloves and masks, said Shawn Vinson, county police spokesman.

Todd Edwards, a spokesman for the DEA’s Baltimore district office, said reports of responders locally and along the East Coast needing treatment prompted a review of its own procedures and developmen­t of the guidance.

The DEA did not suggest use of the devices, but Edwards said the hand-held technology is another useful tool that can tell officials when fentanyl is present. But he said the equipment and those operating it can always miss the drugs.

“It’s another indicator,” Edwards said. “But common sense and caution always dictate what you do.”

Edwards pointed to a device’s recent use in Howard County as a good applicatio­n of the tool.

Police officers called on the county hazardous materials team to check the back seat of a patrol car where a suspect had tossed some powder on the floor mat.

“They wanted to know if they should be traveling with it,” said Capt. Jeremy Clancy, the hazmat coordinato­r in the county fire marshal’s office. “We needed to know how to clean it up.”

Clancy said the equipment also has been used to evaluate other suspected threats, such as anthrax and ricin in the mail and liquids in unlabeled containers, though there has been an increase in calls for about fentanyl, which was what was found in the police cruiser.

Smiths Detection’s Frunzi said it’s these stories that have propelled interest among agencies in adding fentanyl detection capabiliti­es to equipment they already use or in investing in new devices, which can cost $20,000 to $50,000, depending on their capabiliti­es and sensitivit­y.

The portable devices have tested well, but fentanyl poses unique problems, said Edward Sisco, a research chemist who partnered with Jennifer Verkoutere­n, a physical scientist, to study the technologi­es for the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

If fentanyl makes up less than 10 percent of a sample, it might not register easily, and a street sample could have just 1 or 2 percent fentanyl, he said. Illicit labs also are churning out similar drugs that don’t register at all.

“There is value in these devices,” Sisco said. “It’s key to make sure users understand where weaknesses lie. If you don’t get a hit, that may not mean there is nothing there.”

Dr. Leana S. Wen, Baltimore’s health commission­er, said a safer bet for emergency responders is to treat any suspicious­looking substance as dangerous and follow protocols for handling and cleaning the scene and the individual­s who may have been exposed.

“We don’t want responders or bystanders to be afraid to respond to someone who is overdosing,” Wen said. “Take precaution­s but do not be afraid to respond.”

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