Rachel McFadden, Sara Wallace-Keeshen, Kristi Petrillo Straub, Rebecca A Hosey, Rachel Neuschatz, Keara McNulty, Ashish P Thakrar
Journal of addiction medicine 2024 Jan-Feb 01The veterinary sedative xylazine is spreading in unregulated opioid supplies across North America. Among people who use drugs with repeated exposure to xylazine, a distinct wound type has emerged. Here, we describe these wounds and share our experience treating them in a nurse-led, low-barrier wound care clinic in Philadelphia, PA. We propose a reimagining of wound treatment across settings to better serve people who use drugs, and we advocate for stronger protections against the harms of an increasingly adulterated drug supply. Our perspective from the epicenter of the xylazine crisis can inform the response of communities across the country who are starting to face harms associated with xylazine. Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Society of Addiction Medicine.
Rachel McFadden, Sara Wallace-Keeshen, Kristi Petrillo Straub, Rebecca A Hosey, Rachel Neuschatz, Keara McNulty, Ashish P Thakrar. Xylazine-associated Wounds: Clinical Experience From a Low-barrier Wound Care Clinic in Philadelphia. Journal of addiction medicine. 2024 Jan-Feb 01;18(1):9-12
PMID: 38019592
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