Fentanyl is Poisoning Arizona鈥檚 Teens. Students Are Reducing Overdoses, One PSA at a Time
A 鈥楴o Second Chance鈥 campaign in nation鈥檚 fourth largest county demystifies the deadly synthetic opioid being found in vapes, counterfeit meds.
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This article is about youth drug use and death. Free, confidential treatment referral and information is available in English and Spanish at 800-662-4357, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration鈥檚 National Helpline.
Four teenagers take turns reading steadily from a teleprompter. Their message is as simple as their videos鈥 black and white color scheme: With fentanyl, there is no second chance.
鈥淟ook, I鈥檓 not here to preach. But you need to be aware of a serious issue,鈥 begins one of now seven public safety announcements written and produced by Arizona鈥檚 Tempe Union High School District students.
In a conversational tone aimed at their Gen Z peers, the students calmly walk through party scenarios and life saving information about fentanyl, the synthetic opioid responsible for over . As little as two grains of salt, approximately 2 mg, are lethal. The size of a pencil tip.
What began last fall as a marketing club project has since become a nationally-recognized, peer to peer called 鈥淣o Second Chance,鈥 led by four students from two Tempe schools.
Students traversed Arizona and the country, leading local parent workshops and competing in an international competition to quickly spread the word about , commonly laced recreational and counterfeit prescription drugs, and Naloxone or Narcan, the overdose reversal medication.
The federal Drug Enforcement Administration has just 鈥 one of two projects in the country to be recognized for their prevention work.
Students behind the campaign were motivated by the silence on the deadly trend that has claimed the lives of thousands of teens throughout their state.
鈥淭here’s this entire world underneath our feet,鈥 Corona del Sol high school senior Jaia Neal told 社区黑料. 鈥淎nd yet I don’t hear any of it on social media, or from any of my friends or parents or anything. It’s like, what is happening? How are people not freaking out that so many people are dying from this?鈥
A sobering released last year revealed that among 10 to 19 year olds, fentanyl-related overdose deaths increased 182% from 2019 to 2021. Two thirds of them were not alone when they overdosed.
Nearly all deaths were unintentional 鈥 of synthetic opioid deaths from 2021 were ruled a suicide.
Such was the case for Ethan Dukes, 16. His mother, Shari, did not know why her early riser did not wake up one Saturday until the autopsy results came in.
In a way, No Second Chances鈥 campaign story begins with Ethan, the track athlete with dreams of being a parent and lawyer.
鈥淥ne pill can kill 鈥 I always say one pill does kill. One pill flipped my entire world around,鈥 his mother, lifetime district administrator and local prevention advocate Shari Dukes said.
He had gone to bed early, by 10:15, after coming home from a party Friday night. At the time, February of 2019, fentanyl was not on her nor the district鈥檚 radar.
Shari told her family鈥檚 experience, and frustration over schools鈥 silence for over two years after Ethan鈥檚 death, to the school board and an old colleague, Tempe Union鈥檚 social emotional wellness director, Ron Denne Jr.
鈥淚 thought, if I don’t know and I’m so involved, then there’s got to be all these other folks. Your kid can’t go to bed one day and not wake up the next,鈥 Dukes said.
Denne pitched their community relations team and Corona del Sol鈥檚 marketing club advisor 鈥 and students took the torch.
No Second Chance has been meeting and presenting with family survivors, and National Guard and DEA drug trafficking teams. Their videos have been screened during video announcements at high schools within the district. Later this basketball season, some will make an appearance on the Phoenix Suns鈥 jumbotron.
For those who鈥檝e been doing prevention work for years, the campaign is exactly what鈥檚 been missing: how to reach young people effectively.
In the few months since students wrote and recorded PSAs, the landscape has already shifted. The amount of counterfeit pills containing lethal doses has risen from four in ten to seven in ten, the DEA reports.
Teens are most commonly accessing fentanyl unknowingly from social media or secondhand from friends who have. Looking for prescription drugs, youth find laced, counterfeit Oxycodone, known as blue M30 pills, Percocet or Xanax.

鈥淧eople don’t know what they don’t know鈥 we want them to understand that there are bad people that are using social media platforms to sell drugs,鈥 said National Guard Sergeant Tommy Morga, who helps lead the Arizona Counter Drug Task Force.
Compounding concerns, fentanyl is hard to accurately test for. Drugs are mixed unevenly; scraping one side of a pill may yield a false negative. Some THC vapes are impossible to take apart.
Just six years ago, fentanyl was a rarity outside of medicinal use as an anesthetic particularly for cancer patients. But the drug, 50 to 100 times more powerful than morphine, has ravaged parts of the country, particularly border areas, like Tempe Union鈥檚 , one of the nation鈥檚 most populous.
In Texas alone, have sought to authorize Narcan and emergency training for educators and schools. California last month, requiring school safety plans include opioid training. In , advocates are pushing for harm reduction approaches like Tempe Union鈥檚, instead of abstinence or zero tolerance messaging.
Almost immediately after the PSAs debuted at Tempe Union鈥檚 high schools, emails from teachers rolled in: thank you for showing these, my brother died of an overdose; my cousin is addicted.
Today, 10 doses of Narcan are available at five locations at each high school. Buses are stocked. About 50 students and 250 staff have been trained to administer it, including all nurses, security guards and transportation teams. QR codes to make confidential counselor appointments are posted throughout campuses. The districts鈥 teachers can access free counseling through Talkspace and longterm support via .听
At Corona del Sol, Neal never crossed paths with Ethan, four years her elder. But while presenting at a DEA teen academy meeting, she revealed her link to him, trading confidence for pained frustration.
How could they walk the same halls, have the same teachers, and not know Ethan died from fentanyl poisoning?
鈥淗ow did we not know,鈥 Neal asked, 鈥渉ow close it is to us?鈥
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