The Florida House on Wednesday unanimously passed a proposal to require hospitals to test for fentanyl when a person comes in with a suspected overdose appears.
The bill (HB 1195), known as "Gage's Law," is sponsored in the House by Rep. Rita Harris, D-Orlando, who says it's named for Gage Austin Taylor, who died three years ago of an accidental fentanyl overdose.
It advanced in the House by a 114-0 vote. The Senate must still vote on a companion bill (SB 1346).
"The goal of this legislation is simple," says Harris. "It's to enhance detection and management of fentanyl-related incidents in emergency medical settings where time-sensitive care is often the difference between life and death. As Florida continues to grapple with the deadly impact of fentanyl, and as we continue to tackle the crisis, Gage's Law will make an immediate difference in how we detect and treat this dangerous substance."
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid. According to the analysis, the drug is roughly 100 times more potent than morphine and 50 times more potent than heroin. Illicit manufacturers often mix it with other drugs - such as heroin, methamphetamine and cocaine - to increase the potency of what they're selling and to lower the cost of production.
According to the bill analysis, more than 2,500 people in Florida died with fentanyl in their systems during the first half of 2023. The vast majority were accidental.
Megan LaDue says her son Wade's overdose death was preventable. He'd taken a drug without knowing it contained fentanyl. He was temporarily revived with Narcan before he died.
"I asked the doctor to test him, to run a toxicology screen so we could know what was in his system, and the doctor refused," LaDue says. "They never tested for fentanyl. They never told me how dangerous it was. They never warned us that fentanyl stays in your body longer than Narcan can reverse it. And then, unstable, they medically discharged him and sent him home."
LaDue says the emergency room is where her son should have been saved.
"I didn't know that my son was still in danger," she says. "I didn't know that the drugs still in his system were killing him."
Several lawmakers say they've heard from constituents like LaDue who lost loved ones to fentanyl. Rep. Marie Woodson, D-Hollywood, says a friend of hers lost a child to fentanyl.
"And that was my first encounter with parents who lost their children to this deadly drug," Woodson says. "And I did not know that so many parents were going through that. She invited me to an event, and I was shocked to hear the parents talking about the pain, seeing what they all were going through."
Under the bill, a hospital or hospital-based off-campus emergency department would be required to conduct fentanyl tests for all overdose cases and keep the results in the patient's clinical record.
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