I've seen a few YouTube videos of cops getting pretty messed up during traffic stops that turned into drug busts of Fentanyl.
But we all know how dramatic they can be.
But we all know how dramatic they can be.

MYTH: You canoverdose by touching fentenyl. FACTS!
No, you can/t accidentally overdose by touching fentanyl
Here is the truth behind the myth and three other common myths about fentanyl.
Here is the truth behind four common myths about fentanyl.
Myth: You can overdose by touching an item containing fentanyl.
Fentanyl isn't absorbed well by the skin. For fentanyl to have a physical effect on the body,
it must enter the bloodstream.
The symptoms people have reported when claiming they've touched fentanyl-laced items,
such as dizziness, heart rate increases and passing out, aren't consistent with a fentanyl overdose,
Myth: Breathing air in a room with fentanyl can make you sick.
Medical experts said this is false.
That's because fentanyl isn't volatile, meaning it doesn't easily become a vapor.
Myth: Fentanyl deaths in the U.S. are increasing because immigrants
are smuggling the drug through "open borders".Â
This is False.
most fentanyl is seized at official ports of entry and not between them,
where most migrants try to cross the border,
U.S. Customs and Border Protection data shows.
And in 2022, 89% of convicted fentanyl drug traffickers were U.S. citizens.
"Drug traffickers deal with professionals, not amateurs, and they prefer U.S. citizens,"
Sanho Tree, director of the Drug Policy Project at the Institute for Policy Studies,
a progressive Washington, D.C.-based think tank, told PolitiFact in 2022.
Myth: Fentanyl smells like popcorn when it burns.
This is False.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that fentanyl is odorless and tasteless
There is no evidence that burning or smoking fentanyl will produce a popcorn-like scent,
Updated with work
Updated with source links.
Poynter - Poynter
No, you can't accidentally overdose by touching fentanyl - Poynter
This fact check was originally published by PolitiFact, which is part of the Poynter Institute.
See the sources for this fact check here.
PolitiFact | Common myths about fentanyl debunked: No, you can't accidentally overdose by touching fentanyl
From Poynter Institute
PolitiFact
Because if you Google it, you will see multiple sources stating the same thing.
Narcan allows one to OD repeatedly.
I used to half joke that Narcan should be outlawed and Heroin legalized.
Then again I also half joked that airbags in steering wheels should be replaced by spikes so that people who wear seatbelts wouldn't have to pay for airbags.
In my humble opinion, walk away. The drug can act differently on different people, and on different medications people are taking. Toxic from overseas.
Because if you Google it, you will see multiple sources stating the same thing.
I used to half joke that Narcan should be outlawed and Heroin legalized.
Then again I also half joked that airbags in steering wheels should be replaced by spikes so that people who wear seatbelts wouldn't have to pay for airbags.
One of us should be worried that we're both paramedics, both posted pretty much the same thing, and both have the same avatar picture. I'm just not sure which one.
Myth: Fentanyl deaths in the U.S. are increasing because immigrants
are smuggling the drug through "open borders".
This is False.
most fentanyl is seized at official ports of entry and not between them
Sounds like it's about who you ask....
Well, Dr. Feldman, whose article is linked in post 8, seems like a prett good guy to ask...
...Dr. Ryan Feldman, PharmD is an Emergency Medicine Clinical Pharmacy Specialist as well as a Clinical Toxicologist and Certified Poison Specialist, who experienced first-hand occupational exposure to liquid fentanyl while attempting to dispose of a container with 950 mcg of aqueous fentanyl (95 mL x 10 mcg/ml). The exposure occurred over a large skin surface area including his ungloved hand, wrist, and forearm. Notably, the exposure involved skin barrier compromise due to a healing laceration on his hand and an abrasion on his wrist. The total potential exposure was estimated to be up to 380 mcg of fentanyl....