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Published 14:58 14 Jul 2022 BST
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Renee's warning has been seen by thousands online (Image: Renee Parsons)[/caption]
Fentanyl is a strong opioid painkiller that is 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine. It can be deadly if too much is used, and has been the cause of a spike in overdoses in the US.
Last year, over 100,000 Americans died of drug overdoses in just 12 months, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found, with around two-thirds linked to fentanyl and other synthetic drugs. Earlier this year, two men in South California were busted with enough fentanyl to kill 4.7 million people.
Parson said: "As [my husband] began to somewhat lecture me, it hit me like a ton of bricks. All of a sudden I felt it start in my shoulders and the feeling was quickly going down my body and it would not stop.
"I said, 'Justin, please help me. Im not kidding I feel really funny.' I grab his arm not thinking and then my body went completely numb, I could barely talk and I could barely breath. I was fighting to stay awake as Justin was screaming at me to stay awake and trying to talk to 911 and find the closest Fire Station or Hospital. I passed out before we arrived at the hospital, but thankfully they worked almost as quickly as my husband did to get me there."
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A dollar bill wrapped in packaging (Image: Renee Parsons)[/caption]
Parson said she was in hospital for several hours but after being given the correct medication, she started to feel "somewhat normal again".
She claimed a police officer put the incident down to one of two things - the dollar bill had been used to cut or store drugs and was accidentally dropped, or it was purposely dropped with drugs on it.
"Either way, this is absolutely real and sad," Renee said, "The mixture of my wet hands and the alcohol from the wipes, mixed with my bodies reaction to that drug could of cost me my life."
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A deadly dose of fentanyl. (Image: Drug Enforcement Administration)[/caption]
Some have been sceptical about whether this incident could have possibly happened but it was only in June that a Tennessee sheriff's office warned that folded dollar bills containing fentanyl had been found in two separate incidents.
"This is a very dangerous issue!" the Giles County Sheriff’s Department warned in a Facebook post. "Please share and educate your children to not pick up any folded money they may find in or around businesses, playgrounds, etc., without using great caution and even alerting a parent or guardian."
"I don’t care if it’s a $20 bill or a $100 bill do not touch it!" Parson added.
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