Pubdate: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 Source: Portland Press Herald (ME) Copyright: 2002 Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.portland.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/744 Author: Josie Huang RASH OF OVERDOSES LINKED TO CHEAPER, POTENT DRUGS Vivian Daicy's long history of drug abuse caught up with her early Sunday morning when she became the 11th person since January to die of a drug overdose in Portland. In contrast, five people died from overdoses during the same period last year. "There's never been a year with so many (overdose deaths) in such a short period of time," said Police Chief Michael Chitwood. But police and emergency personnel say they are not surprised because drugs are increasingly cheap and potent, and that leads to overdoses. This year, paramedics have been answering two to three overdose- related calls a day, compared with one to two a day last year, said Deputy Fire Chief Terry Walsh, who oversees the city's Medcu unit. Walsh marvels at how just three or four years ago, paramedics used to view heroin overdoses as anomalies, but now "it's become so commonplace that it's just another call." Authorities say if it were not for the quick response of paramedics, the number of fatal overdoses would double, maybe triple. They point to this weekend as an example. As Daicy, 46, succumbed to the suspected influence of alcohol, cocaine and prescription drugs, emergency personnel saved three other overdose victims: a 19-year-old man on mescaline, and a 24-year-old woman and a 43-year-old man, both on methadone. Methadone - a controversial synthetic narcotic prescribed to treat heroin and painkiller addiction - and opiates such as heroin and Oxycontin may be implicated in two-thirds of the 11 overdoses, said Sgt. Scott Pelletier of the Maine Drug Enforcement Agency. The rest appear to involve the mixture of alcohol and prescription drugs or cocaine, he said. Walsh said that in some of the 11 overdoses, the victims were found alone. Other times, he said, a friend waited to call for help after clearing the scene of any evidence of drugs or moving the victim to another location. Precious minutes slipped by until oxygen stopped feeding the brain and the victims died. The overdose victims are made up of a near-even number of men and women, and their ages ranged from the early 20s to 46. It appeared that some had overdoses before, Pelletier said. Fueling the overdoses, Pelletier said, is the plummeting cost of drugs. He said one-hundredth of a gram of heroin, which sold for between $30 and $35 last year, now costs $20 on the streets of Portland. Even better bargains - as low as $6 a bag - can be found in Massachusetts, he said. The increased potency of drugs is also a big culprit in overdoses, Chitwood said. "Years ago, (a particular type of heroin) could have been 35 to 40 percent pure - all diluted," he said. Today, he said, it's 75 percent to 80 percent pure. Chitwood said the illegal distribution of methadone is significantly adding to the problem. The woman who overdosed on methadone this weekend got the drug from her boyfriend, Thomas Hume, who goes to the methadone clinic CAP Quality Care in Westbrook, police said. They arrested the 25-year-old Westbrook man on charges of furnishing Schedule W drugs and possession of heroin. Last year, 16 people died of overdoses in Portland and 54 died statewide. Paramedics, bracing for an increase in overdose-related calls, are being stretched thin by an increase in activity, Walsh said. Last year, calls were up 10 percent - an extra 1,000 - largely because of the city's aging population, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh