Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 20
Seattle Residents Rebuke Naloxone Flyers for Dogs as County Logs 191 Overdose Deaths
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 20

Seattle Residents Rebuke Naloxone Flyers for Dogs as County Logs 191 Overdose Deaths

1 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 20
  • Belltown residents and anti-homelessness activist Andrea Suarez amplified backlash after flyers surfaced advising drug users how to give naloxone and CPR to dogs exposed to narcotics.
  • The Indigenous Harm Reduction Team flyer says dogs can overdose by licking contaminated ground, foil or residue on hands, and tells owners an overdose "does NOT make you a bad person."
  • The dispute lands as Seattle and King County remain deep in an overdose crisis: prosecutors filed 46 felony drug-dealing charges in the first quarter, and the county recorded 191 overdose deaths through April.
  • Fentanyl remains central to that backdrop — the DEA said in November it seized about 3.4 million potentially lethal doses from two trafficking groups investigated in western Washington.
  • Animal exposure is no longer hypothetical: NBC News reported in January that six puppies were revived after a suspected drug overdose about an hour northeast of Seattle.
As Seattle's drug crisis endangers pets, are harm reduction policies a compassionate necessity or a sign of societal failure?
Beyond saving pets, could harm reduction tools for animals inadvertently normalize the public drug crisis they aim to mitigate?