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This video traces the history of fentanyl from its creation in the 1960s as a breakthrough medical anesthetic to its role in today’s deadly opioid crisis. Drawing on medical history, pharmaceutical development, and early clinical use, it explains how a compound designed to ease pain in surgery became one of the most dangerous synthetic opioids in modern medicine. The documentary-style narration explores how fentanyl’s extreme potency, fast action, and ease of production changed hospital practice, pain management, and eventually the illegal drug trade.

Through key moments and turning points, the video looks at how fentanyl spread from operating rooms to prescription pain treatment, and then into counterfeit pills and street drugs across North America and beyond. It places the rise of fentanyl-related overdoses in the wider history of opioids, tracing connections between drug policy, pharmaceutical marketing, and global trafficking networks, while showing how a single chemical invention helped shape a public health crisis that defines our time.

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dependencia quimica é doença
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#Illustrated #History #Fentanyl

Respostas de 5

  1. There's a major issue now when you have chronic pain, no doctors want to prescribe any opiates. Not even hydrocodone anymore. So in a way they are pushing people to find alternative ways to help ease their pain. If these doctors would lighten up on prescribing hydrocodone and prescribe it how they used to 15 years ago or so then it would prevent a lot of people buying those fake pressed pills, which are impersonating much stronger drugs than Vicodin or Norcos. I think many people would be satisfied with a lower opiate like hydrocodone that would be covered by their insurance and would be less likely to pay out of their own pocket for knock off pills.
    Anytime I bring up pain to a doctor now, I rarely get sympathy. Doctors act as if all I'm trying to do is get a script from them and then all they want to give me is another NSAID that hurts my stomach, and is probably destroying my liver.

  2. In the early 2000’s, I was given fentanyl for a cardiac catheterization. The excellent anesthesiologist explained that fentanyl was such a good pain reliever that patients needed less sedation, making for a safer procedure and quicker recovery.

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