Here’s the “new normal” in southwestern Ohio: 50 to 70 opioid overdoses per week, with spikes that can leave a dozen people dead in just 48 hours. Those grim statistics, relayed by Newtown's police chief at a Senate hearing Thursday, highlighted an urgent debate over how to stop the flood of deadly synthetic opioids into the U.S.
Drugs such as fentanyl and carfentanil, which can be 50 to 10,000 times more potent than heroin, have intensified the opioid epidemic and overwhelmed police departments and coroner’s offices across Ohio and other states.