SAVE A LIfE
        
        
          Take these steps to help save people who may be overdosing:
        
        
          
            • Stay with them and keep talking. Reassure them and try to make them
          
        
        
          
            talk to you.
          
        
        
          
            • If they are unconscious, turn them to the side. This position helps
          
        
        
          
            protect the airway and prevents inhaling stomach contents in case
          
        
        
          
            of vomiting.
          
        
        
          
            • Call 911 and follow the operator’s instructions until emergency medical
          
        
        
          
            personnel arrive.
          
        
        
          
            • Do not leave the victim alone. Stay until help arrives.
          
        
        
          
            • Ask if you should ride in the ambulance. The paramedics or emergency
          
        
        
          
            room doctor may have questions about the overdose victim. Ask if
          
        
        
          
            you should notify the victim’s family or another appropriate person
          
        
        
          
            about the overdose. Often that responsibility belongs to the attending
          
        
        
          
            physician or other emergency room staff.
          
        
        
          respiratory center. The lungs stop working because they are no longer
        
        
          getting signals from the brain to breathe. When the lungs stop functioning,
        
        
          the heart goes into cardiac arrest and stops beating because the lungs
        
        
          are no longer providing it with oxygen. Without medical intervention, death
        
        
          follows quickly.
        
        
          In Adam Kull’s case, the police initially believed that he had died of a
        
        
          heroin overdose. But toxicology reports—tests on blood, urine, and bodily
        
        
          tissues—later showed that he had unknowingly injected fentanyl-laced
        
        
          heroin. Fentanyl is an opioid prescription painkiller that’s thirty to fifty
        
        
          times more potent than heroin. Doctors prescribe it most often to people
        
        
          with severe pain from cancer and following major surgery. Surgeons may
        
        
          use it during surgery as part of anesthesia. While no one can be sure
        
        
          how Adam got access to fentanyl, an illegal drug that labs and dealers
        
        
          12
        
        
          Addiction and Overdose