Wisconsin News
Overdose deaths from Xylazine on the rise
Overdose deaths involving a powerful animal tranquilizer mixed with fentanyl are soaring in Milwaukee County.
Last year, 138 of the 616 overdose deaths in Milwaukee County were linked to a combination of Xylazine, also known as “tranq,” mixed with fentanyl. So far this year, six of the confirmed 16 overdose deaths in the county were from that combination, according to the most recent data from the Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s Office.
Although that’s a small sample size, public health experts are worried deaths involving the combination will continue to rise because Xylazine doesn’t respond to naloxone — an opioid reversal medication commonly referred to as Narcan. Xylazine is not an opioid.
Deaths attributed to the drug combination were rare just a few years ago.
In 2020, there were four overdose deaths attributed to the Xylazine and fentanyl mixture in the county. That number is estimated to rise to 239 this year, according to county data.
“I fear it is here to stay, at least for a while,” said Dr. Maryann Mason, an associate professor of emergency medicine at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University.
Gregory Miller, the mobile integrated healthcare manager for the Milwaukee Fire Department, said his team is working to educate people about the deadly combination. They meet with people who have overdosed to offer them harm reduction tools and discuss treatment options.
“It’s just been on the rise,” Miller said about the xylazine and fentanyl overdoses. “We just try to educate people that it’s in the supply, it’s in what they’re using.”
Other communities across the state and nation have also been seeing the drug, which is not approved for human use, pop up in more synthetic opioids. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration found that overdose deaths involving Xylazine increased by 516 percent in the Midwest from 2020 to 2021.
“Xylazine is making the deadliest drug threat our country has ever faced, fentanyl, even deadlier,” DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said in a public safety alert.
The White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy also called Xylazine an “emerging threat to the United States.”
Mason said the drug is often used at veterinary practices to sedate large animals like cows or horses. The drug, which is usually used in a powder form, first emerged in drug markets in the U.S. in the mid-2010s, starting on the east coast, according to a report from the Harm Reduction Journal.
“Now it’s made its way into the larger drug supply in the U.S.,” Mason said. “It has spread and it is definitely in the Midwest now.”
The drug is almost always mixed in with fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that’s 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine. Mason said fentanyl is powerful, but “short acting.”