From what I read in the Act itself, this does not reclassify fentanyl as Schedule I. It classifies all "fentanyl-related" substances as Schedule I. Salts, isomers, similar compounds with slight molecular changes (specifically to the phenyl group), etc. Fentanyl itself will still be Schedule II, and approved for medical use.
No medical use.
From what I read in the Act itself, this does not reclassify fentanyl as Schedule I. It classifies all "fentanyl-related" substances as Schedule I. Salts, isomers, similar compounds with slight molecular changes (specifically to the phenyl group), etc. Fentanyl itself will still be Schedule II, and approved for medical use.
For reading it and replying, and not just running it through chat bot
Good, because paramedics give micrograms of it when someone is in severe pain, and anesthesiologists regularly give it in the OR.
Absolutely false.
That is the definition of schedule 1, not a medical opinion.
Ah. Didnt realize you were offering up a definition, as it is quite invaluable in certain medical scenerios. Sorry.