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Health Agencies Update |

Fentanyl Patch Warning

Bridget M. Kuehn
JAMA. 2012;307(20):2139. doi:10.1001/jama.2012.4764.
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Unintentional exposure of children to fentanyl patches can cause life-threatening harm, warned the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in April.

Unintentional exposures of children to fentanyl patches can cause serious harm.

(Photo credit: Samuel Ashfield/www.sciencesource.com)

The agency recently analyzed 26 cases of such unintentional exposures over the past 15 years, many of which ended in hospitalization or death. More than half of the cases involved children 2 years old or younger. Such very young children are at particular risk of exposure because they are mobile and curious and may find lost, discarded, or improperly stored patches and put them in their mouth or on their skin, according to the agency. Children also may be exposed when a patch being worn by an adult is inadvertently transferred to a child who comes into contact with that person.

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Unintentional exposures of children to fentanyl patches can cause serious harm.

(Photo credit: Samuel Ashfield/www.sciencesource.com)

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