Fentanyl, overdose awareness event set for Sunday, August 25, 2024

By Brian Arola barola@mankatofreepress.com

MANKATO — More than three years since losing Travis Gustavson to fentanyl poisoning, his family continues to honor his legacy by spreading awareness about the drug’s dangers.

The family recently launched the Travis James Gustavson Foundation to further their work. It serves as a way to share the 21-year-old Mankato man’s story while promoting overdose prevention resources.

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They also continue to build up an annual awareness event for fentanyl and other substance overdoses, the latest of which will be Sunday in Ray Erlandson Park.

This will be the event’s third year. Each previous one had memorials for overdose victims, information on treatment and prevention and speakers sharing their stories.

Coming together as a community, said Kim Lange, Gustavson’s mother, demonstrates a commitment to address the ongoing overdose epidemic.

“As a community we need to say enough is enough,” she said. “We’re tired of drug dealers destroying our community.”

Two suppliers who provided fentanyl to Gustavson were convicted on murder charges and sentenced to prison in the years after his 2021 death. Blue Earth County has had similar resolved or pending cases come through district court since then.

Law enforcement agencies, including the Minnesota River Valley Drug Task Force, frequently announce seizures involving fentanyl in its region, prompting criminal charges against suspected dealers. Representatives from various agencies will be in attendance Sunday, including the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Nancy Sack, Gustavson’s grandmother, noticed a change in people’s responses to their outreach work since they started doing it. At their Blue Earth County Fair booth they used to have to work to get people’s attention. This year people were more ready to talk.

“We never had to catch them as they walked by,” Sack said. “They were coming to our table to talk to us about this.”

To her, the response instills such a sense of hope. The stigma keeping people from talking about the issue seems to be dissipating.

“We want the people to know what we didn’t know,” she said. “We’re not going to give up no matter what.”

Sunday’s event will run from 12-3 p.m. For more information, go to www.tjgfoundation-awareness.org.

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Officials: US overdose deaths topped 100K in one year, Minnesota saw 39% increase

The Associated Press
Published: November 17, 2021 - 9:22 AM

This photo provided by Nancy Sack shows Carter Lange, Kim Gustavson, Jason Lange, Matthew Gustavson and Travis Gustavson. Nancy Sack's grandson, Travis Gustavson, died at age 21 in Mankato after overdosing on what he thought was heroin but was actually laced with fentanyl.[Katie Tettam /Nancy Sack via AP]

An estimated 100,000 Americans died of drug overdoses in one year, a never-before-seen milestone that health officials say is tied to the COVID-19 pandemic and a more dangerous drug supply.

Overdose deaths have been rising for more than two decades, accelerated in the past two years and, according to new data posted Wednesday, jumped nearly 30% in the latest year.

President Joe Biden called it “a tragic milestone” in a statement, as administration officials pressed Congress to devote billions of dollars more to address the problem.

“This is unacceptable and it requires an unprecedented response,” said Dr. Rahul Gupta, director of National Drug Control Policy.

Experts believe the top drivers of overdose deaths are the growing prevalence of deadly fentanyl in the illicit drug supply and the COVID-19 pandemic, which left many drug users socially isolated and unable to get treatment or other support.

The number is “devastating,” said Katherine Keyes, a Columbia University expert on drug abuse issues. “It’s a magnitude of overdose death that we haven’t seen in this country."

Drug overdoses now surpass deaths from car crashes, guns and even flu and pneumonia. The total is close to that for diabetes, the nation’s No. 7 cause of death.

Drawing from the latest available death certificate data, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that 100,300 Americans died of drug overdoses from May 2020 to April 2021. It’s not an official count. It can take many months for death investigations involving drug fatalities to become final, so the agency made the estimate based on 98,000 reports it has received so far.

The CDC previously reported there were about 93,000 overdose deaths in 2020, the highest number recorded in a calendar year. Robert Anderson, the CDC’s chief of mortality statistics, said the 2021 tally is likely to surpass 100,000.

“2021 is going to be terrible," agreed Dr. Daniel Ciccarone, a drug policy expert at the University of California, San Francisco.

The new data shows many of the deaths involve illicit fentanyl, a highly lethal opioid that five years ago surpassed heroin as the type of drug involved in the most overdose deaths. Dealers have mixed fentanyl with other drugs — one reason that deaths from methamphetamines and cocaine also are rising.

Drug cartels in Mexico are using chemicals from China to mass produce and distribute fentanyl and meth across America, said Anne Milgram, administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration.

This year, the DEA has seized 12,000 pounds of fentanyl, a record amount, Milgram said. But public health experts and even police officials say that law enforcement measures will not stop the epidemic, and more needs to be done to dampen demand and prevent deaths.

The CDC has not yet calculated racial and ethnic breakdowns of the overdose victims.

It found the estimated death toll rose in all but four states — Delaware, New Hampshire, New Jersey and South Dakota — compared with the same period a year earlier. The states with largest increases were Vermont (70%), West Virginia (62%) and Kentucky (55%).

Minnesota saw an increase of about 39%, with estimated overdose deaths rising to 1,188 in May 2020 through April 2021 from 858 in the previous 12-month period.

The area around the city of Mankato has seen its count of overdose deaths rise from two in 2019, to six last year to 16 so far this year, said police Lt. Jeff Wersal, who leads a regional drug task force.     “I honestly don’t see it getting better, not soon,” he said.

Among the year’s victims was Travis Gustavson, who died in February at the age of 21 in Mankato. His blood was found to show signs of fentanyl, heroin, marijuana and the sedative Xanax, Wersal said       

Gustavson was close to his mother, two brothers and the rest of his family, said his grandmother, Nancy Sack.

He was known for his easy smile, she said. “He could be crying when he was a little guy, but if someone smiled at him, he immediately stopped crying and smiled back,” she recalled.

Gustavson first tried drugs as kid and had been to drug treatment as a teenager, Sack said. He struggled with anxiety and depression, but mainly used marijuana and different kinds of pills, she said.

The morning of the day he died, Travis had a tooth pulled, but he wasn’t prescribed strong painkillers because of his drug history, Sack said. He told his mother he would just stay home and ride out the pain with ibuprofen. He was expecting a visit from his girlfriend that night to watch a movie, she said.

But Gustavson contacted Max Leo Miller, also 21, who provided him a bag containing heroin and fentanyl, according to police.

Some details of what happened are in dispute, but all accounts suggest Gustavson was new to heroin and fentanyl.

Police say Gustavson and Miller exchanged messages on social media. At one point, Gustavson sent a photo of a line of a white substance on a brown table and asked if he was taking the right amount and then wrote “Or bigger?”

According to a police report, Miller responded: “Smaller bro” and “Be careful plz!”

 

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