Pubdate: Fri, 26 May 2006
Source: Detroit News (MI)
Copyright: 2006, The Detroit News
Contact:  http://detnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/126
Author: Kim Kozlowski, The Detroit News
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

FENTANYL DEATHS HIT 33 IN A WEEK

Officials Attribute Seven More Deaths To Potent Painkiller Mixed With 
Heroin Or Cocaine

The Wayne County death toll attributed to fentanyl-laced drugs has 
reached 33 people in one week, putting Metro Detroit at the epicenter 
of a national health concern that reaches into several other states.

There have been at least 200 confirmed deaths in five states 
attributed to the painkiller mixed with heroin or cocaine, with 130 
of them in Wayne County since January 2005. That total doesn't 
include the 33 Wayne deaths from May 18 through Wednesday, which are 
suspected but not yet confirmed by toxicology tests.

"It's a lot bigger than we thought it was in the beginning," said 
John Kashani of the Poison Control Center in New Jersey, where 30 
suspected fentanyl-related deaths occurred in the past month, about 
the same as in Philadelphia.

Nowhere is concern higher than in Metro Detroit.

"The officials of this county should have taken this on a long time 
ago," said Randy Richter, whose son was found dead in Canton on Feb. 
27. "It is absolutely ridiculous to hear they didn't know it was a 
problem because they knew it was a problem. How many lives could have 
been saved?"

Richter's son's death was among nine over three days this winter, a 
Detroit News review of toxicology reports found.

Richter was told his son, 18, was the 30th person to die this year 
because of fentanyl. He's livid officials waited until Friday to make 
the concern public. He suspects officials kept the deaths quiet for 
Super Bowl XL, held in Detroit on Feb. 5, a charge county officials 
emphatically deny.

"We've never done that and never will we do that," said Sharon Banks, 
spokeswoman for the Wayne County executive office, who called that 
suggestion "offensive and irresponsible."

The surge in Wayne County fentanyl-related deaths began in August 
2005 and climbed steadily, according to health records.

Public health officials put out an alert last weekend when 12 people 
died Thursday and Friday.

Most of the victims are believed to have used heroin mixed with 
fentanyl, which is 80-100 times more potent than heroin and can cause 
rapid death through respiratory failure.

This year's victims had fentanyl concentrations in their blood 
ranging from .002 to as high as .19, according to toxicology reports 
from the Wayne County Medical Examiner's Office reviewed by The News. 
Victims were a mix of men and women, black and white.

Before this week, the highest concentration of deaths occurred Feb. 
27, 28 and March 1, when nine people died, including Richter's son, 
health reports show. Of those, two had lethal amounts of the drug in 
their blood of .11 or higher and others had high levels.

While some support more public awareness, others fear publicity will 
have the opposite effect.

"One of the concerns many treatment providers have is this: Are 
heroin users going to be seeking out fentanyl for their desire to get 
the ultimate high?" said Christopher Parks of the Neighborhood 
Services Organization. "They heard people are dying from it so it 
must be a potent drug."

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials are trying to 
develop a profile of those most likely to die from the painkiller, so 
they can target groups with educational information.

County officials say they have heard the fentanyl may be manufactured 
in a lab, but law enforcement says they are investigating all angles, 
including whether health officials may be stealing it.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opiate used for pain relief and anesthesia. 
Therapeutic concentrations in the bloodstream range between .001 and 
.01, officials say.

"You are basically playing Russian roulette by using this," said 
Wayne County Deputy Chief Medical Examiner Cheryl Loewe.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman