Home > Reducing the harms of xylazine: clinical approaches, research deficits, and public health context.

Zagorski, Claire M and Hosey, Rebecca A and Moraff, Christopher and Ferguson, Aaron and Figgatt, Mary and Aronowitz, Shoshana and Stahl, Natalie E and Hill, Lucas G and McElligott, Zoe and Dasgupta, Nabarun (2023) Reducing the harms of xylazine: clinical approaches, research deficits, and public health context. Harm Reduction Journal, 20, 141. doi: 10.1186/s12954-023-00879-7.

External website: https://harmreductionjournal.biomedcentral.com/art...

OBJECTIVES: Xylazine has emerged as a consistent part of the unregulated drug supply in recent months. We discuss major domains of xylazine's harm, current knowledge deficits, clinical and harm reduction strategies for minimizing harm, and xylazine's public health and policy context. As an interdisciplinary team from across the USA, we have pooled our knowledge to provide an overview of xylazine's current and emerging contexts.

METHODS: To inform this essay, the pertinent literature was reviewed, clinical knowledge and protocols were shared by multiple clinicians with direct expertise, and policy and public health context were added by expert authors.

RESULTS: We describe xylazine's major harm domains-acute poisoning, extended sedation, and wounds, along with anemia and hyperglycemia, which have been reported anecdotally but lack as clear of a connection to xylazine. Current successful practices for xylazine wound care are detailed. Understanding xylazine's epidemiology will also require greater investment in drug checking and surveillance. Finally, approaches to community-based wound care are discussed, along with an orientation to the larger policy and public health context.

CONCLUSIONS: Addressing the harms of xylazine requires interdisciplinary participation, investment in community-based harm reduction strategies, and improved drug supply surveillance. The relatively unique context of xylazine demands buy-in from public health professionals, harm reduction professionals, clinicians, basic science researchers, policymakers and more.

Note: Xylazine is a drug used for sedation, anesthesia, muscle relaxation, and analgesia in animals such as horses, cattle, and other non-human mammals.


Item Type
Article
Publication Type
International, Open Access, Article
Drug Type
CNS depressants / Sedatives, Prescription/Over the counter
Intervention Type
Screening / Assessment
Date
30 September 2023
Identification #
doi: 10.1186/s12954-023-00879-7
Publisher
BioMed Central
Volume
20
EndNote

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