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The Daily Briefing· Thursday
25
June2026

New medicine is arriving faster than the safety net can hold it

Thursday is a study in mismatch. The tools that help are multiplying: drugs that blunt craving across five substances, paramedics starting treatment on the sidewalk. The things that keep people alive between doses keep getting pulled out from under them.

Today’s reporting

07

The 60-second read

What’s new in the field

Opioids

The deadliest story is the quietest one: carfentanil, roughly 100 times stronger than fentanyl, has resurfaced in the supply. On the policy side, a bill to let methadone be dispensed at the corner pharmacy is back in front of Congress, the kind of access change that sounds boring and isn’t. And Florida’s field-initiated buprenorphine programs keep posting numbers that challenge how we think about when treatment can start.

Stimulants

No pharmacotherapy has ever been approved for methamphetamine or cocaine use disorder, which is exactly why the GLP-1 cross-substance data, which includes a cocaine signal, is worth watching closely rather than hyping.

Depressants

The DEA placed a designer benzodiazepine into Schedule I, a first-of-its-kind move whose actual effect on anyone’s safety is a genuinely open question.

Dissociatives

The ketamine clinic on every corner is today’s lead: a market that has doubled in two years while the rules governing who can prescribe it and to whom stayed a patchwork. The same drug pulling people out of depression is creating a dependence problem few clinics are set up to catch.

The pulse

The word underneath a lot of the recovery community this week was whiplash. People are reading that a shot taken once a week can quiet a craving, and two headlines later, that a change in a benefits formula they never agreed to could undo years of steady ground. If that is you right now: the unsteadiness you’re feeling isn’t a character flaw, it’s an accurate read of a system that keeps moving the floor. You are not behind. You are paying attention. Hold the next right thing, not the whole staircase.

Arizona watch

Quiet on the state front this week. We’re keeping an eye on how AHCCCS and Maricopa County direct opioid-settlement dollars next. The field-treatment and pharmacy-access models making news elsewhere are exactly the kind of thing those funds could underwrite here.