The rush of 911 calls from downtown Austin was the first clue about the wave of overdoses to come. At least 10 EMS units were sent to an alley near a nightclub on East Seventh Street and began treating people for overdoses after 9:30 a.m. Monday, April 29. One man died in the alley and two were taken to the nearby Dell Seton Medical Center at the University of Texas.
Over the next 13 hours, authorities encountered at least three more deaths within a half-mile of one another in Southeast Austin and responded to dozens more overdoses. Interviews with city officials and documents obtained by the American-Statesman provide the most detailed account to date of how agencies pooled resources and responded to the spate of overdoses, which authorities believe were caused by fentanyl — a synthetic opioid 50 times stronger than heroin that is often mixed into street drugs to increase potency.
By the time Austin-Travis County EMS declared the “overdose surge” over on Friday, May 3, ……. 79 people had overdosed. Nine people had died, according to the Travis County medical examiner’s office.
Though approved for medical use as a painkiller, synthetic opioids such as fentanyl cause more than 150 deaths per day, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Due to its high potency, when added to other drugs, it makes them more addictive as well as cheaper.
All nine people who died had fentanyl in their bodies, preliminary toxicology reports from the Travis County medical examiner’s officer show, according to Hector Nieto, a spokesperson for Travis County. Cocaine was also present in eight cases and methamphetamine in three. Testing to determine the final causes of death could take up to 60 days.