The Columbus Dispatch

OSU overdoses reminder student drug use common

- Your Turn Avery Meyer Guest columnist

Last week, three people overdosed near Ohio State University’s campus, and two of them, who were students, died from overdose.

The following morning, the SOAR Initiative, an organizati­on run largely by students on OSU’S campus, sent out a warning text that there were pills thought to be Adderall contaminat­ed with fentanyl circulatin­g around campus. While unconfirme­d, it is suspected that these individual­s had used those pills.

As an OSU alumna myself, my heart breaks for these individual­s’ friends, family and the OSU community at large. I also know that this act, taking Adderall, is not a rare instance in the college student community. Amid this tragic event, we must address how this heartbreak­ing outcome from a relatively common act could have been prevented.

Illicit drug market is saturated with fentanyl

While we may not like to admit it, drug use is often commonplac­e in a college student’s life.

Adderall is a stimulant – other similar drugs are Ritalin and Vyvanse – and is often used to help with concentrat­ion while studying. A national study, done by The Ohio State University themselves, found that 1 in 6 college students has used a stimulant drug un-prescribed.

Typically, there is little risk of death with taking an average prescribed amount of a stimulant, barring underlying conditions. However, as we have seen increasing­ly in the United States, the illicit drug market is saturated with fentanyl. Therefore, as we have seen in this case, a somewhat common and low risk of fatality act of taking a 20 mg pill of Adderall can turn deadly.

Given this informatio­n, instead of focusing on the heavy-handed task of entirely eradicatin­g drug use, we must instead focus on how to prevent negative outcomes.

This concept is called harm reduction and acknowledg­es that some people will use drugs, such as college students with stimulants like Adderall, and that our efforts are best focused on ensuring that people do not experience harm from that behavior.

For example, in this situation a harm reduction strategy such as fentanyl test strips or naloxone would have been lifesaving.

Fentanyl test strips are illegal in Ohio

Fentanyl test strips allow a person to test their drugs before using them and have been shown to change drug use behavior in 70% of users, per a Johns Hopkins study.

Naloxone is the opioid overdose reversal medication; it brings people back from opioid overdoses.

Despite the clear efficacy of these resources, accesses these resources can be burdensome.

In Ohio, fentanyl test strips are currently illegal, though there is legislatio­n currently in the Ohio Senate to change this. This bill, Senate Bill 296, would also remove barriers to distributi­on of naloxone.

As such, it is absolutely vital the Ohio Senate vote to approve this legislatio­n to make these life-saving tools legal and more accessible. Ohio’s current law criminaliz­ing test strips and creating barriers to naloxone is the opposite of harm reduction, and leaves people who may try a drug vulnerable to the Russian roulette of a fentanyl-contaminat­ed drug market.

We do not have to keep experienci­ng tragedies like the deaths of these students over and over. The Ohio Senate must act now to make life-saving tools like fentanyl test strips legal and naloxone accessible.

If you or a loved need fentanyl test strips, visit thesoarini­tiative.org. For free naloxone, visit nextdistro.org/hro. Both are offered free of charge to Ohio residents.

Avery Meyer is a graduate student studying health policy at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She grew up in Columbus, studied neuroscien­ce at The Ohio State University and after graduating, worked as a counselor with people in treatment for opioid use disorder.

 ?? HANDOUT ?? A national study by Ohio State University found that 1 in 6 college students has used a stimulant drug such as Adderall unprescrib­ed.
HANDOUT A national study by Ohio State University found that 1 in 6 college students has used a stimulant drug such as Adderall unprescrib­ed.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States