Combating The Opioid Crisis And Its National Security Threat Through CReDO: A Multidisciplinary Solution With Disaster Medicine Implications.
Christina Ann WoodwardFadi Salah IssaDuane Carl CanevaAmalia VoskanyanRaj Arvind GadhiaAlexander HartAttila Julius HertelendyDavid Anthony DiGregorioRobert Gregory CiottoneGregory Robert CiottonePublished in: Disaster medicine and public health preparedness (2023)
For the first time in history, the United States surpassed 100,000 overdose-related deaths in a 12-month period, driven by synthetic opioids such as fentanyl. Also for the first time, potential chemical weapons are readily available on the streets and the dark web. Opioids represent a rare trifecta, used for licit pain management, as an illicit drug of abuse, and with potential use as a weapon of terror. Community-based Response to Drug Overdose (CReDO) is an initiative to unite agencies, disciplines, government and private partners in one coordinated opioid emergencies response plan under nationwide standards, and can be integrated into the Disaster Medicine discipline due to the risk of mass casualty incidents involving fentanyl or its derivatives. Attention to the opioid crisis through CReDO will save lives by promoting information sharing between disciplines, shortened response time to overdose clusters, community collaboration to identify criminal distribution networks, and holistic approaches to addiction.
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