March 18, 2026
1 min read

Drug smoking can lead to severe burns, complicating harm reduction efforts

As U.S. drug use behavior has shifted away from injecting and toward smoking, public health experts have been almost uniform in their reaction. The development, they’ve said, is almost entirely positive: Smoking drugs like fentanyl, instead of injecting, can help reduce infections, disease transmission, and potentially even overdose rates. 

A new paper published this week, however, adds a significant wrinkle to the cost-benefit analysis. People who switch to smoking drugs, the new research shows, may be at risk for severe burns. 

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Dietitian weighs in on healthy eating during National Nutrition Month

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Dietitian weighs in on healthy eating during National Nutrition Month

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