Deputize people to assist you by providing reliable documentation.
I think Chiefs of Police and Sheriffs would be a good start. Do you know any LEOs? I’ve seen video of cops going down and being revived by narcan. To say “Sorry” this new drug will kill an officer accidently exposed is crazy. I think LEO’s would have a very vested interest in running it up the chain of command.
GL!
It is impossible to find phone numbers to contact Dr. Rahul Gupta, the Trump Campaign, or basically anyone else anymore. We DO NOT need to spend millions of dollars to find a reversal agent for xylazine when TWO already exist with years of proof of efficacy.
If people die because no one is interested, we are all to blame.
Plus, if Trump wants to come forward with the answer without spending millions of dollars more to recreate what already exists -— so much better for him. He can be the one to save the kids dying of xyalzine. That’s OK by me.
Ignorance kills -— especially when the answer is already out there just waiting to be “discovered” by someone with the power to contact all the people with unpublished phone numbers!!!
"Since we do not know if reversal agents regularly used in veterinary medicine (e.g., yohimbine hydrochloride, tolazoline hydrochloride) are safe or effective in humans, they should not be used."
Sounds like it might help to use some of that big pharma money to promote human testing.
Not known to work in humans I guess:
“Xylazine is not currently known to be reversed by naloxone.
Because xylazine is not an opioid, associated toxicities may not be reversed by naloxone. Healthcare professionals who manage opioid overdoses should consider xylazine exposure if patients are not responding as expected when naloxone is administered or when signs or symptoms of xylazine exposure (e.g., unusual skin necrosis) are present. Other reversal agents regularly used in veterinary medicine (e.g., yohimbine hydrochloride, tolazoline hydrochloride) are not known to be safe and effective treatment options for xylazine-involved overdose in humans and should not be used. Appropriate supportive measures should be provided to patients who do not respond to naloxone.”
https://www.fda.gov/media/162981/download
and
https://www.drugs.com/illicit/xylazine.html
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2859820/
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2862816/