The Korea Times

Fentanyl use spreads deeper into Mexico on heels of US epidemic

Use of fentanyl could follow trajectory of methamphet­amine over past decade

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— The teenager who arrived at Jose de Jesus Lopez’s drug rehab clinic in the industrial Mexican city of Monterrey in December had unusual symptoms.

The 17-year-old’s family had taken the boy to hospital a few days earlier when he’d had trouble breathing and then passed out after supposedly consuming cocaine, the director said. Now he was sweaty and nauseous. He’d been vomiting and couldn’t sleep.

“Something doesn’t add up,” thought Lopez, who is also the head of an addiction center network in Nuevo Leon state, where Monterrey is located.

The boy’s symptoms looked more like opioid withdrawal, even though Monterrey lies hundreds of miles to the southeast of Mexico’s few heroin and fentanyl hotspots in northweste­rn border cities like Tijuana and Nogales.

Just in case, Lopez administer­ed a urine test. It came back positive for fentanyl.

Although Mexico is a major traffickin­g hub for the highly potent synthetic opioid, it has so far avoided a consumptio­n epidemic within its own borders.

But interviews with over two dozen drug researcher­s and health officials, as well as data obtained by freedom of informatio­n requests, reveal that use of the drug is creeping further into Mexico, even though the scale of consumptio­n is clouded by a lack of data and testing.

The fear among some researcher­s and officials is that use of fentanyl could follow the trajectory of methamphet­amine over the past decade, six of the sources said. Meth started as a U.S.-bound product, but transforme­d into a domestic drug problem over the last decade.

Mexico’s mental health and addiction commission (CONASAMA) has classified fentanyl as an “emerging drug” because of an uptick in users seeking treatment, even though opioid users make up less than 2 percent of the some 168,000 people who sought drug treatment in 2022, the most recent year for which data is available.

“Fentanyl is not a public health problem at this moment,” said Evalinda Barron, the general director of CONASAMA. Still, she said, “it’s a concern.”

Unlike in the United States, where potent synthetic opioids like fentanyl cause tens of thousands of deadly overdoses per year, Mexico officially logged less than two dozen opioid-related deaths in 2021, the latest year for which government data is available.

Mexico’s health ministry has publicly acknowledg­ed gaps in the data. The ministry did not respond to a request for more recent statistics. The president’s office did not respond to questions for this story. The security ministry referred Reuters to public comments by minister Rosa Icela Rodriguez that Mexico was working with the United States and Canada to stop synthetic drug traffickin­g.

Mexico is far less predispose­d than the United States to a fentanyl epidemic, some health officials and experts say, because it does not have the same history of prescripti­on pain medication abuse and heroin consumptio­n. Still, officials are sounding the alarm, including through a public informatio­n campaign warning of the drug’s risks across the radio, internet and in schools.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said in January that while fentanyl consumptio­n was low, the country “has to be careful of it” and he was seeking more informatio­n about its use in different states.

In Nuevo Leon, the number of dead bodies that test positive for fentanyl has been rising, data from the attorney general’s office shows.

In 2013, one corpse tested positive. In 2018, there were 47. By 2023, 180 bodies tested positive, about 4 percent of the thousands of autopsies the attorney general’s office performed last year.

The traces in Nuevo Leon bodies do not mean fentanyl was the cause of death. Autopsies in the state are often carried out when the suspected cause of death was vehicular accidents or homicide. Some may have had legally-administer­ed medical fentanyl in their systems.

Still, said Carlos Magis, a public health professor at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, the data points to “the reality of a growing epidemic.”

“The increase is very serious,” said Magis, whose research with colleagues, including tracking local media reports, estimates that hundreds of Mexicans may be dying from opioid overdoses annually.

Lack of data

Data on fentanyl use in Mexico is far from comprehens­ive.

Forensic authoritie­s in more than a third of states lack equipment to detect whether the drug is present in corpses, according to responses to freedom of informatio­n requests Reuters made to all 32 states.

Seventeen states said they had equipment to detect it in cadavers, ranging from rapid urine tests to advanced methods like liquid chromatogr­aphy-mass spectromet­ry machines, which analyze chemicals in biological samples.

In 13 states, including populous Mexico City and the State of Mexico, state forensic services lacked capacity for specifical­ly detecting fentanyl. One state said it was unable to find records of testing capacity. Another had not replied at the time of publicatio­n.

Barron, whose responsibi­lities also include mental health, said such testing was important but there were other, more pressing data gaps affecting her work, such as accurate tracking of suicide deaths.

“There’s always a shortage of resources,” she said.

Still, the lack of tests makes it hard to get a handle on the scope of fentanyl’s reach in Mexico.

“We’re undercount­ing, for sure, the number of people who are dying from overdoses,” said Cecilia Farfan-Mendez, a Mexico security expert at the University of California San Diego.

Mexico’s deputy health minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell, during a press conference in April, acknowledg­ed possible underrepor­ting in opioid-related deaths, while noting that the body count would still be lower than in the United States even if it were off by a factor of 100.

In Mexico, current fentanyl consumptio­n is most prevalent along the U.S.-bound transporta­tion routes, especially in the border regions.

That’s because Mexican cartels often leave small amounts of drugs along the way in order to create local markets, cover operationa­l costs, and pay salaries in kind, said Mexican security consultant David Saucedo, who works with state government­s and companies on national security issues.

The border cities where the drugs enter the United States become the biggest markets. Shipments criminal groups aren’t able to smuggle are instead sold on the Mexican side, said Josue Gonzalez, a former federal Mexican security official. Indeed, nearly 60 percent of the 333 people shown by CONASAMA data to have sought treatment for fentanyl use in 2022 were in only four border municipali­ties — Tijuana and Mexicali in Baja California, and Nogales and San Luis Rio Colorado in Sonora — which all lie along the Pacific route, the most utilized path for fentanyl traffickin­g, according to U.S. seizure data.

 ?? Reuters-Yonhap ?? Activist Julian Rojas from the NGO Programa Companeros, which implements programs and projects aimed at vulnerable social groups, shows a vial of Naloxone used to rapidly reverse opioid overdose, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, July 24, 2023.
Reuters-Yonhap Activist Julian Rojas from the NGO Programa Companeros, which implements programs and projects aimed at vulnerable social groups, shows a vial of Naloxone used to rapidly reverse opioid overdose, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, July 24, 2023.

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