Hamilton County residents can now get free fentanyl test strips in the mail.
Fentanyl is a powerful opioid often mixed into heroin. It's sometimes added to other street drugs, and someone might not know the drug they bought has fentanyl. Two students at Ohio State University that may have been caused by fentanyl-laced Adderall.
Hamilton County Health Commissioner Greg Kesterman says test strips can save lives.
"Obviously, it's best that somebody doesn't use the illegal substance," Kesterman said. "But if somebody has made the purchase, they're definitely planning on using it. And by testing, they're able to alter their behavior."
Test strips are still available in person through the county's needle exchange program.
You can request the test strips by mail by texting "FTS" to 22999. You'll get a response with three links: one to submit a request, one to a site explaining how to use the test strips, and one to , where Ohioans living outside Hamilton County can request test strips.
You can also get the opioid overdose reversal drug naloxone in the mail by texting "Narcan" to 22999. You have to provide your address but do not need to give your name.
This program is limited to Hamilton County residents, but all Ohioans can get fentanyl test strips in the mail through .
Tuesday is the first ever . More than 107,000 people in the U.S. died of drug overdoses in the 12-month period ending last November; of those, 66% involved a synthetic opioid like fentanyl, according to the CDC.