Homeless people fight to save lives, and stay alive, as L.A.’s fentanyl crisis worsens

 

 

Next to a row of tents covered with blue tarps on Skid Row, Jasmine Paredes watched a friend scribble a message on a lamppost with a pink Sharpie: L.A. — Fenty is #1 killa — may God help us all.

Paredes had recently lost two friends to fentanyl overdoses. She prevented a third death by performing CPR and administering Narcan, a nasal spray that can reverse the effects of opioids — one of nearly a dozen times she has brought someone back from the brink, she said.

She doesn’t use fentanyl herself, she said. But a few days ago, she took a hit from a glass pipe she thought was filled with meth that instead turned out to be the much more powerful drug.

“As soon as I exhaled, everything got really slow and dreamy,” said Paredes, 36, who lives in a tent in the flower district. “I was unconscious for two days. I later crawled across the street to my friend’s tent and slept for another two days.”

Here and in other homeless encampments around Los Angeles, life-and-death battles with fentanyl take place every day: hardened addicts revived after their hearts have stopped; people like Paredes who shared a pipe, not knowing what it contained; the loss of friend after friend.

Many have witnessed an overdose, suffered one themselves or helped save someone’s life. Narcan is nearly as common in tents as Tylenol is in medicine cabinets.

This is the reality behind numbers recently released by the L.A. County Public Health Department showing a surge in overdose deaths among homeless people, driven by the explosive rise of fentanyl.

Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid, was implicated in 58% of deadly overdoses among unhoused people in L.A. County in 2021 — nearly three times the percentage in 2019.

The overall death rate among people experiencing homelessness in the county increased 55% from 2019 to 2021.

n the streets, users say, fentanyl is more expensive than meth. It is so potent that even a trace amount in a pipe or several puffs of secondhand smoke can make someone pass out or become extremely ill, especially if they’ve never taken the drug before.

While no group has been untouched by fentanyl, the overdoses have hit unhoused people especially hard.

“On Skid Row, it’s a day-to-day crisis. It’s visible,” said Shoshanna Scholar, director of the harm reduction division at the Los Angeles County Health Services Department. “But it’s really a problem across the entire county.”

Standing at 6th and Crocker streets, Paredes said that to safely use meth, she usually sticks to a dealer whom she trusts not to sell her anything laced with fentanyl. After her accidental brush with the drug, she uses her own pipe and cleans it after anyone borrows it. Other drug users said they take similar precautions.

Paredes, who suffers from depression and anxiety, said she started using meth in high school. She was sober for years until her father died of liver cancer in 2017. Soon after, she lost her mother to uterine cancer. Her addiction caused her boyfriend to leave with their 3-year-old son, she said.

Karma said she smokes fentanyl as often as every two hours to avoid a painful withdrawal.(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

Paredes’ friend, who had just scrawled the plea to a higher power on the lamppost, uses fentanyl. The woman, who identified herself only as Karma, said she smokes the drug as often as every two hours to avoid the excruciating withdrawal pain.

She said a gram of fentanyl can cost $70, compared with $10 for the same amount of meth, and can last her up to two days, depending on its potency.

Nearby, several homeless people said that they, like Paredes, had experienced dire consequences from unintentional exposure to fentanyl.

Tanya Williams, 52, sat in her brown tent outside a small metal warehouse. In February, she said, she used someone’s glass pipe to smoke crack. She didn’t know it had fentanyl in it.

“As soon as I took a hit, I passed out,” she said.

People later told her they panicked after she stopped breathing and her skin turned blue. They dosed her with Narcan and called paramedics. On the way to the hospital, her heart stopped.

“When I woke up, there were eight or so doctors around me,” she said. “I started screaming, ‘Jesus, please don’t let me die!’”

Williams suspects that either the crack she smoked was laced with fentanyl or the pipe contained fentanyl remnants, since its owner used the drug.

As she sat on an air mattress recounting the story, she began to cry. It was a reminder of how far she had fallen.

Williams said she spent 14 years in prison in her native Kansas on manslaughter charges; she was reluctant to discuss the details. She said that when she got out, she learned that her husband had fallen in love with her sister. She came to L.A. to be near her father, who later died of dementia. That led her to start using drugs again, she said.

In January, she was raped on Skid Row, she said.

“I want to go back to Kansas,” she said. “But I have so much anger toward my sister, I’m afraid I’ll do something.”

A block away, just outside the Fred Jordan Missions, Joe Hay said that a few months before, he was in a tent with a woman, smoking what he thought was crack. He started vomiting and passed out for hours.

“Two days later, I went to the doctor and told them what happened,” said Hay, 70. “The blood test showed I had traces of fentanyl.”

Roger, 57, who declined to give his last name, said he was in Boyle Heights in November with his girlfriend, a meth and fentanyl user. She blew smoke toward him several times, and he passed out.

“When I woke up, I was in my boxers and had a bag of ice under my neck,” he said. “My girlfriend was on the phone with the paramedics and told me I had overdosed.”

After that, he took a class on how to handle fentanyl overdoses. In February, after he and his girlfriend had finished buying crack, they saw a woman collapse on the sidewalk. Roger rubbed his knuckles against her sternum, as he had learned in the class. The woman swung her arm against his.

“We knew she was OK after that,” he said, adding that Narcan and CPR would have been the next step had she not reacted.

In East Hollywood, outside the LA Community Health Project — where unhoused people can receive clean needles, fentanyl test strips and Narcan, as well as referrals to health and housing services — Alex Taylor, 35, sat slumped on the sidewalk, occasionally nodding off.

The L.A. native said he became addicted to crystal meth at age 15. Almost a year ago, he shot up fentanyl and overdosed.

“It’s not my everyday drug, so it’s easy to get a bad bunch,” said Taylor. “I thought I’d kicked the bucket.”

Narcan nasal spray, which can reverse the effects of opioids, is nearly as common in tents as Tylenol is in medicine cabinets.(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

Someone gave him Narcan, but he had to be taken to the hospital by ambulance.

“It’s kind of easy to OD, but I didn’t care. Screw it,” he said.

Also outside the LA Community Health Project, Kevin Franklin, 19, said the nonprofit has helped him quit fentanyl, but he still uses meth.

Franklin, from Baltimore, said he got addicted to meth at age 12. His mother died of a heroin overdose, and his father shot himself in the head.

He arrived in L.A. on heroin, but it was hard to find any; fentanyl was cheaper and more available, he said. He overdosed multiple times.

“The fentanyl high — it’s much more intense, but your high falls off much faster,” he said. “And you’re like, ‘Oh, dammit, I need to go get more and more and more.’ Even while you are high, you’re thinking about how to get more fentanyl.”

The brushes with death from overdosing didn’t give him much pause.

“An addict doesn’t think that way. A $10 high, $20 high — that’s what they think,” he said.

Article Date: 
Wednesday, May 31, 2023