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Prince's death and the growing fear of the 'kill pill'

(CNN) They might as well be playing Russian Roulette.

It doesn't matter if you're talking about a teenager chasing a higher high or a mega star trying to soothe chronic pain. The counterfeit pills they may be reaching for are more deadly than ever, experts say.

Why? One word: fentanyl.

"Synthetic fentanyl showing up in the street drug supply is an enormous game changer," says Carol Falkowski, CEO of Drug Abuse Dialogues, a group that helps track drug trends for the National Institute on Drug Abuse. "It means anybody who purchases illegal drugs can unknowingly be taking fentanyl, which is 100 times stronger than morphine."

All it takes is a dose of fentanyl the size of three grains of sand to kill.

Fentanyl powder is cheap and easy to obtain on the dark web, experts warn, making it attractive to those manufacturing it into pill form mixed with other drugs.

Those counterfeit drugs are sold on the street, and usually dangerously usually labeled as something less potent. Even forensic scientists can't tell whether some of the pills sold on the street are counterfeit or not just by looking at them. That's how good the counterfeiters have gotten at making the illicit drugs.

Those who take fake prescriptions likely have no idea if fentanyl is inside, or how much.

"They should be known as a kill pill," Falkowski says.

Prince Rogers Nelson's death may turn out to be the most famous example of the dangers posed by counterfeit fentanyl. Pills found in his Minnesota home were reportedly marked as hydrocodone, but when tested the pills turned out to have fentanyl in them. No one has said if Prince took those pills. But he did die of fentanyl toxicity, according to the autopsy report.

Fentanyl is an opioid. Its effect on the body is exactly like heroin, or any other opiate-based medication. But fentanyl is 50 times stronger than heroin, up to 100 times stronger than morphine. It is stronger than any prescription painkiller on the market.

"All opiates are just oral heroin. There is no difference to the body," Minneapolis emergency medicine physician Chris Johnson says.

Tracking and taxing the epidemic

The drug that killed Prince is showing up in counterfeit form across the US with devastating effects.

Long before Prince died of a fentanyl overdose, the Drug Enforcement Administration was preparing a document to share with law enforcement around the country. It was a warning. Weeks after Prince died, the document was published, and titled "Counterfeit Prescription Pills Containing Fentanyls: A Global Threat."

"Prince is the most notable and famous person who tragically died from an opioid overdose. But we are seeing it in every town in Minnesota." U.S Senator Amy Klobuchar, who represents Minnesota, told CNN.

Senator Klobuchar authored a bill that would require states to monitor the prescription of powerful painkillers and co-authored another which proposes taxing pharmaceutical companies and using those funds for treatment of opioid addiction.

"We must go even farther," Sen. Klobuchar says. "We need more funding for treatment and better prescription drug monitoring programs. Because of the fact states like Florida don't even share their information across state lines. There is no way to monitor who is taking what across state lines."

The problem in her state isn't as bad as some states such as Ohio or Florida, which have been hit hardest by the illicit fentanyl epidemic, according to CDC statistics. But attention has focused on the state following the death of Prince, one of its most famous native sons.

Drug overdose deaths have quadrupled in the past 15 years in Minnesota, according to the state's Department of Public Health.

Opioid overdose deaths are rising Minnesota.

"In 2015, more than half of the drug-related deaths were related to prescription medications rather than illegal street drugs," the health department's report says. 216 deaths were associated with opioid pain relievers and 114 with heroin.

Drug overdoses now kill more Americans across America than car crashes, data from the Centers for Disease Control data shows.

How did we get here?

Minneapolis Dr. Chris Johnson, who has testified about the opioid problem to the Food and Drug Administration, points his finger at doctors and pharmaceutical companies for the epidemic sweeping the country.

They were hawking prescription opioids with abandon, he says.

"There was a push by the pharmaceutical industry and their paid physician advocates that pushed opiates saying they aren't as addictive as we thought," Johnson says. "So they can be used for back pain and other daily pain. They influenced government bodies to emphasize pain management as the doctor's responsibility."

He sighs, and says something he knows some will find distasteful, even shocking, coming from a doctor.

"If the cartels could, they would shake the hand of the medical industry and thank them for creating this new business," Johnson says.

He explains how someone who was given Percocet for back pain for years may turn to illegal alternatives if doctors stop prescribing because of increased scrutiny or if prescriptions become too expensive for a patient.

That's where cheaper heroin, or the counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl may come into play now, he says.

"They are increasingly desperate for opiates to make them feel normal again, then they make that jump" [to illicit drugs], Johnson says.

But Dr. Mark Willenbring, a psychiatrist at Alltyr substance abuse clinic in St. Paul, Minnesota, puts the blame squarely on regulators.

"The real blame is on regulatory authorities. Those regulating pharmacy practice in Florida. They let these huge pill mills operate freely in Florida," he says. "There was no monitoring. The regulatory agencies let this be a free for all."

How to kill opioid addiction, fast

Willenbring spends his days working with patients struggling with substance abuse.

"I have patients that range in age from 17 to 72," he says. "We are seeing something we have never seen before in the US."

He says the demographics of who is addicted to heroin have changed dramatically.

"Traditionally heroin addiction has been a problem associated with middle aged black men about 43 years of age," Willenbring says. "Those statistics have gone back for decades. Now its predominantly young, white people."

He is very clear. Not all substance abuse problems are the same. He describes how his patients feel when they are addicted to opiates and then suddenly taken off them.

"What it means it that you can't experience ordinary pleasure. Every day is a gray day. You have no energy. You have no motivation," Willenbring says. "You have a low grade case of the flu all the time. Your bones and joints ache. And your brain is constantly screaming 'I want more opioids.' It doesn't get better over time."

When it comes to treating opioid addiction, Willenbring says the science is clear and there is agreement on the one treatment that works, fast. You replace what is deficient in the brain.

"The only proven effective treatment is replacement maintenance therapy or methadone," Dr. Willenbring. "What I tell my patients is you can no more will your brain to produce more opioids than you can will your pancreas to produce more insulin."

But the psychiatrist is deeply concerned the current uproar about opioids may do more harm than good if the focus is only on stopping prescribing pills.

"Right now the biggest crisis I am seeing is people with severe disabling chronic pain who are summarily and arbitrarily taken off of them," Willenbring says. "It ruins their lives. I think we are going to see a lot of suicides."

Carol Falkowski says the solution to the opioid epidemic, and the growing threat of fentanyl will take work, not just words, from many different sources. And the medical community, law enforcement, government officials, pharmaceutical companies and regulators must act now.

"Whenever a new drug trend appears on the horizon there's a lot of hand-wringing and 'Oh my, this is awful,'" Falkowksi says. "When it comes to counterfeit fentanyl pills there is no overstatement going on, there's no exaggeration, there's a clear and present danger."

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