Pubdate: Mon, 21 Nov 2005
Source: Advocate, The (Norwalk, CT)
Contact:  http://www.norwalkadvocate.com
Address: 605 West Avenue, Norwalk, CT 06850
Fax: 203-964-2345
Copyright: 2005 Southern Connecticut Newspapers, Inc
Author: Melanie Lefkowitz, Newsday Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone)

OVERDOSE REMEDY

New city program aims at reducing heroin deaths by prescribing preventive drug

The city has quietly begun funding a cutting-edge program aimed at 
reducing heroin overdose deaths by distributing an antidote drug to 
users at needle exchanges.

Experts say naloxone, known by its trade name, Narcan, may have 
already saved dozens of lives in the city since the Harm Reduction 
Coalition, an advocacy group that seeks to reduce the harms of drug 
use, began prescribing it about seven months ago.

Under the program, users are prescribed syringes of Narcan, which can 
be injected into a muscle of a person who is overdosing. Doctors say 
the drug's only effect is to reverse heroin and other opiate 
overdoses. It is not dangerous, they say, and can't be misused.

"It's sort of a revolutionary idea, in a way, to put a medicine in 
the hands of anybody," said Dr. Sharon Stancliff, the program's 
medical director. "Overdose is really preventable in many, many cases."

Narcan is one of the city's latest efforts to combat heroin, which 
experts believe causes more deaths in New York than homicides. The 
high-profile deaths this summer of two college students who overdosed 
on a mixture of heroin and cocaine cast a spotlight on the rate of 
drug fatalities. According to city Department of Health statistics, 
drugs kill about 900 people each year - nearly 700 of them from 
opiates, which include heroin and other drugs like oxycontin.

Doctors believe Narcan is used to prevent approximately one death for 
every 10 prescriptions written, Stancliff said. It works by blocking 
opioid receptors in the brain, reversing heroin's effects.

The city's Department of Health has given the Harm Reduction 
Coalition about $200,000 to distribute Narcan. That funding, approved 
by the City Council in June, puts New York ahead of all but a handful 
of U.S. cities, and even state law. Until April, the fact that 
non-professionals are administering a prescription medication could 
potentially be legally "sticky," Stancliff said.

"So I'm a little outside the lines now but I don't think it's a big 
deal, everyone knows I'm doing it," she said.

Come April, the city - which is monitoring Stancliff's success 
closely - hopes to expand the program.

"One area that we're looking into would be seeing if EMTs might have 
the ability to use naloxone," said Dr. Andrew Kolodny, medical 
director of the health department's mental hygiene division. "We've 
begun a very preliminary conversation with the Fire Department."

In addition to supplying users with the antidote drug, Stancliff and 
outreach workers train them how to spot the signs of an overdose and 
what to do - call 911, do mouth to mouth, and, if necessary, inject 
them with Narcan. A pamphlet given to users warns them that someone 
may be having an overdose if he or she is unconscious, breathing very 
slowly and not responding.

"We know about 80 percent of the time people shoot up with a peer. 
It's like drinking, people don't do it alone," Kolodny said. 
"Historically, heroin users do all the wrong things when they witness 
an overdose - there are reports about injecting people with milk, 
putting ice on people. They are scared to call 911."

Stancliff, who left a post at the state Department of Health to run 
this program, said she has prescribed Narcan to about 700 heroin 
users, many of them in the South Bronx, since last spring. About 100 
other prescriptions were distributed in a smaller program before 
that, she said.

So far, 51 people have reported using Narcan to reverse overdoses. 
Not all of those people would have died without Narcan, Stancliff 
said, but some of them would have. Outreach workers believe there may 
have been even more "saves" that users, perhaps out of fear, 
neglected to report.

"I ask people when I train them to please let me know if they used 
it, if the person lived," said Yolanda Birthwright, an intern at the 
Lower East Side Harm Reduction Center, one of the needle exchange 
programs that Stancliff works with, who trains about half a dozen 
users a week. "It's beautiful. I feel like I'm making a difference, I 
really do."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman