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#11
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08-05-2025, 10:28 PM
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| My Rank: CORPORAL Poster Rank:1457 Join Date: Nov 2024 Posts: 396 Mentioned: 2 Post(s) Quoted: 163 Post(s)
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Re: Female Deputy Collapses After a Supposed Fentanyl Overdose During Search
1. You assume it's only through skin contact 2. You're wrong about what the Dea said, and I didn't even check the other sources https://www.dea.gov/sites/default/fi...ications/Final STANDARD size of Fentanyl Safety Recommendations for First Respond....pdf "Incidental skin contact may occur during daily activities but is not expected to lead to harmful effects if the contaminated skin is promptly washed off with water." IF...Promptly. Neither of those words happened in these videos. |
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#12
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08-05-2025, 10:58 PM
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| My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL Poster Rank:2702 Join Date: Jun 2017 Posts: 153 Mentioned: 1 Post(s) Quoted: 99 Post(s)
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Re: Female Deputy Collapses After a Supposed Fentanyl Overdose During Search
Someone is missing a brain cell... "if" and you're saying I assume... "If" you walk around for 12 hours with fentanyl covering your hands, that could be problematic. "If". Fucking pleb... Again, for the chimps in the back, it is physically....literally impossible... due to the laws of nature, to overdose on fetanyl via just skin contact, ESPECIALLY within 2 minutes of contact. Tell me you're retarded without telling me you're retarded. |
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#15
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08-06-2025, 11:40 PM
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Re: Female Deputy Collapses After a Supposed Fentanyl Overdose During Search
If you can't debate this subject without calling each other names, take it to the watercooler, please. I believed the hype (cops, authorities, government, media) about this until very recently when I researched it. Ok, I asked ChatGPT. Question: Is it true what cops say — that it takes very little fentanyl absorbed through the skin to kill you? I feel like it's fear-mongering. Answer: You're absolutely right to be skeptical — the claim that touching or being near fentanyl can easily kill you is largely exaggerated and not backed by scientific evidence. This idea has been widely circulated, especially by some law enforcement and media outlets, but toxicologists and medical experts have consistently pushed back against it. Here’s what the science says: - Fentanyl does not absorb through the skin easily. It is a very potent opioid, but dermal absorption is extremely slow. It takes extended contact and usually a transdermal delivery system (like a medical patch) — combined with heat and enhancers — to begin delivering a therapeutic dose over hours.Why do these exaggerated claims persist? - Fear-based training: Some police training programs overstate the risks to emphasize caution.Expert Consensus: Organizations like the American College of Medical Toxicology (ACMT) and the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology (AACT) have published joint position papers stating clearly: Bottom Line: No — it is not true that a tiny amount of fentanyl on the skin is likely to kill someone. That’s fear-mongering. While caution is justified when handling potent substances, science and calm protocols should lead, not panic. ===== Question: Is it possible at all to be affected by skin contact with fentanyl, and if so, how much and how long? Answer: Yes, it is technically possible to be affected by fentanyl through skin contact — but only under very specific, prolonged, and unlikely conditions. Here's what the science says: Fentanyl is not readily absorbed through intact skin. It's extremely unlikely to cause any effect — let alone overdose — from touching a small amount briefly. Here’s what would have to happen for skin exposure to matter: - You’d need a large amount of fentanyl in contact with your skin.Example: Fentanyl patches used medically are designed with absorption enhancers and require multiple hours of direct contact to deliver even a controlled therapeutic dose. According to toxicologists: In short: Casual skin contact is not a risk. Wash your hands with soap and water if you’re exposed, and you’re fine. No need for Narcan. No need for panic. ===== Question: What about accidental inhalation of fentanyl other than directly snorting it on purpose? If so, how much would it take? Answer: Yes, accidental inhalation of fentanyl is possible — but it’s extremely unlikely to happen under normal conditions, and even harder for it to reach a dangerous dose unless you're in a very specific scenario. Here’s what toxicologists and hazmat experts say: - Fentanyl must be airborne and in fine powder form to be inhaled.How much is needed to overdose from inhalation? - There is no single "lethal dose" for fentanyl because it depends on tolerance, body weight, and form. But experts say even a few milligrams would need to be directly inhaled and absorbed rapidly into the bloodstream — which is almost impossible to do by accident unless you intentionally snort it.In short: - You’re not going to inhale a fatal dose of fentanyl by walking past someone carrying it, being near it, or handling small amounts unless you're in a rare industrial-level exposure situation.If you’re ever exposed to a powder you suspect is fentanyl: Don’t panic. Step back. Avoid stirring it up. Wash hands. Ventilate the area. That’s it.
__________________ 💜🧿See Human | Be Human🧿💜 (War Section Hashtags) |
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#16
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08-07-2025, 09:48 AM
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| My Rank: CORPORAL Poster Rank:1457 Join Date: Nov 2024 Posts: 396 Mentioned: 2 Post(s) Quoted: 163 Post(s)
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Re: Female Deputy Collapses After a Supposed Fentanyl Overdose During Search
You're right. And as much as I like to think that I'm objective and can see through propaganda, I'm not infallible and I never actually looked into it. Thanks for the post; that's interesting to know. Now I can go back to picking up loose change I find on the ground :P
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