Agree with the post just above this one, if I knew how to use the DW I would go for propofol.
Its very short acting - you wake up in 5-10 minutes with a single dose - I believe this is why they feed it to you continuously during surgery. However, propofol combined with a plastic bag would be the way I would guarantee ctb.
Barbiturates are virtually never prescribed anymore - doctors just don't write prescriptions for them anymore after much safer benzos were brought to market. There just isn't any demand out there for them except state executions and right to die organizations. And most drug makers limited production even further because they didn't like the idea that their drugs were being used for capital punishment.
The result is there is hardly any supply driving the cost up to thousands of dollars per dose. Any you'd need a lot to ctb.
For that reason, I'd be very wary of any barbiturates being sold on the dark web. They are most likely a scam.
IV has a broad medical use so I'm wanting to know how specifically to set it up for suicide so I do it correctly.
The drug this IV suicide will be specific to is fentanyl or a nitazene, maybe heroin.
Does the IV have to be ongoing or would it be just a quick injection? Am I just flushing my entire fatal dose? Should I use a catheter/butterfly needle? How can I avoid doing it 'too fast' so that I don't pass out before my death?
Please tell this moron how to use iv properly for suicide with an opioid.
Funny thing you mentioned IVs. A little while ago I was contemplating placing an art line so I would just bleed out as a way to CTB. Can't use a vein because they collapse, clot, and lose pressure after you lose a couple pints of blood, so it would have to be an artery. As far as I could tell, the radial artery in the wrist is the most accessible. There are in fact instructional videos online on how to do this.
The problem was that while some nurses/doctors palpate the artery to find it, others use ultrasound.
So placing it seems difficult compared to using a vein.
Also, I started to read the effects of what happens with catastrophic blood loss - and it wasn't as peaceful as I had presumed - heart attacks, seizures, etc., were all listed as what might happen so forget that.
One thing I've often wondered - maybe someone knows. I'm not a cutter so I would never attempt this, but it makes me wonder - wrist slitting is almost universally known as being unreliable for ctb, however I wonder why more wrist cutters don't just bleed out and die? I mean, the radial artery is right there - its not even buried that much, doctors use it all the time to place art lines and to shove wires (catheter?) in to your heart (angioplasty I think). So you would think that they would bleed out more often...