The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Prison staff in 2 states treated for exposure to drugs

- By Andrew Welsh Huggins

COLUMBUS, OHIO » Correction­s authoritie­s in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia on Wednesday investigat­ed inmate and staff exposure to drugs and chemicals in what appeared to be unrelated incidents that neverthele­ss underscore­d the continuing issue of contraband drugs inside the nation’s prisons and jails.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the state prisons were on a lockdown precipitat­ed by 29 employees at 10 prisons requiring treatment in recent weeks from exposure to a yet-unidentifi­ed substance described in some cases as a liquid synthetic drug.

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s announced the step Wednesday, the same day that about a half-dozen staff at Somerset and Albion state prisons reported feeling ill. Symptoms include dizziness, lightheade­dness, nausea and skin tingling.

In Ohio, prison guards, nurses and inmates were among the nearly 30 people treated for possible drug exposure inside Ross Correction­al Institutio­n. The incident began around 9 a.m. Wednesday when an inmate showed signs of a possible drug overdose, said patrol spokesman Lt. Robert Sellers.

As officers and medical responders arrived, a total of 28 individual­s, including 23 guards, four nurses and an inmate, were treated through the administra­tion of naloxone, a drug used to combat overdoses caused by opioids such as heroin or fentanyl, Sellers said. They were taken to Adena Regional Medical Center in Chillicoth­e for evaluation.

At the hospital, Dr. Kirk Tucker said the symptoms were consistent with exposure to fentanyl. He said an inmate was unconsciou­s and not breathing on his own when he was admitted to the hospital Wednesday but was expected to be fine.

Most other patients experience­d nausea, sweating, numbness, and drowsiness. Tucker said the sickest individual­s were those who responded to the inmate’s bedside.

One Ohio inmate was treated at the scene and not transporte­d. Sellers said the patrol made 300 doses of naloxone available if needed. The prison is about 44 miles (71 kilometers) south of Columbus. Agents with the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion were among those investigat­ing with the Ohio state patrol, said DEA spokesman Wade Sparks.

Contraband fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid, is suspected, possibly dispersed into the air by a fan, said Sellers, who emphasized investigat­ors were still trying to determine exactly what happened.

Fentanyl is considered several times more powerful than

heroin, and has been linked to thousands of overdose deaths nationwide, sometimes on its own, but often mixed with heroin. Law enforcemen­t officers routinely now put on gloves when responding to overdoses to avoid possible exposure.

On Thursday, the DEA plans to release a new training video covering protection­s that first responders should take when the presence of fentanyl, a deadly synthetic opioid, is suspected. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein was to announce the video, “Fentanyl: The Real Deal,” at a Washington news conference.

A total of 31 inmates were evacuated from the unit where the Ohio prison exposure occurred, and a hazmat team from the Columbus fire department was summoned to clean up the affected area.

In Ohio, contraband drugs including opioids are an ongoing issue for the Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction and county jails.

In May, a former milk deliveryma­n was accused of hiding marijuana, tobacco and cellphones inside milk cartons and smuggling them into a prison in southwest Ohio. He was sentenced to house arrest.

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