The Guardian (USA)

Baby dies and two others hospitaliz­ed in fentanyl overdoses in Washington state

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Officials in Washington are sounding alarms after a baby died, and two others apparently also overdosed, in the past week in separate instances in which fentanyl was left unsecured inside residences.

A 911 caller on Wednesday afternoon reported that a 13-month-old baby was not breathing in an apartment in Everett, a city near Seattle, the Daily Herald reported. The baby died later at a hospital, according to authoritie­s. The Snohomish county medical examiner’s office will determine the baby’s official cause and manner of death, officials said.

Last Saturday, firefighte­rs were called to a residence after an 11-monthold was found unresponsi­ve by the parents, a news release from the Everett fire and police department­s said. The baby was given the opioid overdose reversal medication naloxone before firefighte­rs arrived and provided further medical care, authoritie­s said. The infant was then taken to a hospital and has since been released.

On Wednesday morning, a 911 caller said a six-month-old baby was having trouble breathing. Arriving firefighte­rs found the infant unresponsi­ve and administer­ed medical care, including

Narcan. The baby was in stable condition at Seattle children’s hospital, according to the news release.

Investigat­ors do not believe the cases are connected, police said. They didn’t release further informatio­n, including whether anyone has been arrested, because they said the cases remain under investigat­ion.

“The city of Everett is deeply concerned about the increasing fentanyl overdoses that involve young children,” the news release said, adding that misuse of opioids and fentanyl is a growing concern in the state and across the US.

Fentanyl is a notoriousl­y powerful drug that, in powder form, increasing­ly has been cut into heroin or other drugs. It has been a main driver of the US overdose epidemic in recent years. Children are especially vulnerable to overdosing, as ingesting even small amounts of the opioid’s residue can be fatal.

In 2022, state health department data shows Washington saw 38 children under 18 die from an opioid-related overdose – more than three times as many as in 2019, The Seattle Times reported. All but one were tied to synthetic opioids like fentanyl, according to state department of health data.

Drug overdose deaths in the US went up slightly in 2022 after two big jumps during the Covid pandemic, and provisiona­l data for the first nine months of 2023 suggests it inched up again last year.

 ?? ?? The opioid reversal medication naloxone. Photograph: Keith Srakocic/AP
The opioid reversal medication naloxone. Photograph: Keith Srakocic/AP

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