The Story of Fentanyl, Part 1: A prescription drug turned dangerous pill
This is Part 1 of a two-part web series on the facts behind fentanyl, the people it has affected and where to go from here.
Brigette Krieg sits by her daughter’s hospital bed, waiting for 16-year-old Ally to wake up. The Saskatoon teenager is in a coma after purposefully taking a pill to try and end her life.
The illegal tablet contained toxic amounts of fentanyl, a strong prescription painkiller. When used appropriately, fentanyl isn’t lethal. But its deadly effects have been felt across Saskatchewan, with a heightened awareness over the past year.
The Office of the Chief Coroner has confirmed six deaths related to illicit fentanyl pills in Saskatchewan since 2013. Five were in Saskatoon, one was in Kindersley and all of them were men.
But that only includes overdose deaths where victims accidentally took fentanyl thinking it was OxyContin, or “fake oxy.” Nineteen other people have died in Saskatchewan from overdoses involving pharmaceutical fentanyl, according to the latest government statistics obtained by CKOMNews.