Authorities on Monday confirmed the first death in Santa Clara County attributed to a dangerous animal tranquilizer that is increasingly mixed with opioids like fentanyl and heroin.
A 36-year-old man who was found unresponsive in San Jose and died in late February tested positive for xylazine in postmortem testing, county officials said.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has issued a health alert about the alarming uptick in trafficking of fentanyl mixed with the drug.revealed that xylazine had been discovered in the bloodstreams of four fatal fentanyl overdose victims in the city. "Community members need to be even more vigilant with how and what they are using, with xylazine now in Santa Clara County," Dr. Tiffany Ho, Medical Director of the County Behavioral Health Services Department added.
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Santa Clara County records first official death from xylazineXylazine, also known by the street name “Tranq,” is a drug intended as a sedative tranquilizer for large animals like horses and cattle. The drug has no approved use in humans.
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Santa Clara County officials confirm first xylazine related deathAuthorities on Monday confirmed the first death in Santa Clara County attributed to a dangerous animal tranquilizer that is increasingly mixed with opioids like fentanyl and heroin.
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Santa Clara County Reports First Death Due to ‘Tranq' Animal TranquilizerAuthorities on Monday confirmed the first death in Santa Clara County attributed to a dangerous animal tranquilizer that is increasingly mixed with opioids like fentanyl and heroin.
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Santa Clara County records first death due to 'tranq'Authorities on Monday confirmed the first death in Santa Clara County attributed to a dangerous animal tranquilizer that is increasingly mixed with opioids like fentanyl and heroin.
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Santa Clara County reports first 'Tranq' deathSanta Clara County announced its first overdose death due to xylazine, an emerging street drug also known as “tranq.'
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Santa Clara County Relaxes COVID RulesStarting Monday, Santa Clara County plans to follow new state guidance on COVID rules. Among other changes, masks will no longer be required in high-risk and health care facilities including jails, homeless shelters and long-term care homes.
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