Evan Wondrasek

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Blocking fentanyl usually required several doses of naloxone, he told them. “Remember, with that amount of naloxone you put them in instant withdrawal. They could come up swinging.” This was a remarkable insight into opioids: their control of the brain’s reward pathways can be so complete that even when an overdose victim is revived from death, his response is often to fight the person who revived him.
The Least of Us: True Tales of America and Hope in the Time of Fentanyl and Meth
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