BACKGROUND: The opioid crisis, driven by fentanyl use, continues to worsen in the US and there has been a lack of focus on nonfatal overdose and how pediatric populations are being affected.
OBJECTIVES: We determined the prevalence of nonfatal pediatric fentanyl exposures and associated characteristics and delineated how such characteristics are associated with major (life-threatening) outcomes. METHODS: This repeated cross-sectional study examined characteristics of pediatric nonfatal fentanyl exposures (aged 0–19 years) reported to poison centers in 49 US states from 2015 through 2023.
RESULTS: 3,009 nonfatal pediatric exposures (41.5% female) were reported to poison centers—58.9% aged 13–19 and 41.1% aged 0–12. The number of exposures increased overall from 69 in 2015 to 893 in 2023 (a 1,194.2% increase, p < .001). Exposures increased by 924.3% among those aged 0–12 (p < .001) and by 1,506.3% among those aged 13–19 (p < .001). Ingestion-only use was the most prevalent route of administration by those aged 0–12 (76.9%) and 13–19 (54.1%). Prevalence of ingestion-only use increased from 44.1% of exposures in 2015 to 67.9% in 2023 (p < .001). The majority of patients aged 0–12 were exposed unintentionally (81.7%, vs. 1.0% among patients aged 13–19) while the majority of patients aged 13–19 misused or “abused” fentanyl (65.7% vs. 1.8%). The plurality of exposures (41.0%) resulted in a major (life-threatening) effect.
CONCLUSIONS: Pediatric exposures to fentanyl are increasing and over one-third of cases are unintentional and/or had documented life-threatening effects. Prevention and harm reduction efforts need to include efforts for youth, particularly as counterfeit pills containing fentanyl flood the illicit market.
Nonfatal pediatric fentanyl exposures reported to US poison centers, 2015-2023
American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse [Epub 2025 Mar 7]. doi: 10.1080/00952990.2025.2457481.