Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jun 2006
Source: MSNBC (US Web)
Section: NBC Nightly News
Contact:  http://msnbc.com/news/
Address: 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10112
Copyright: 2006 MSNBC
Author: Kevin Tibbles, Correspondent, NBC News
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

TRANSCRIPT: KILLER HEROIN: USERS DIE FOR THE HIGH

100 Times Stronger Than Morphine, Super Heroin Ravages Drug Community

CHICAGO - On the street, drug users have a simple name for it: "The bomb."

Emergency room doctors call it a killer.

"It goes to their central nervous system, and they almost immediately 
stop breathing," says Dr. Chuck Thomas with Norwegian American 
Hospital in Chicago. Story continues below ↓ advertisement

Super-charged heroin, mixed with the powerful painkiller Fentanyl -- 
up to 100 times stronger than morphine -- is rampaging through drug 
communities. It's already killed nearly 200 people this year.

Police have seen a spike in overdose deaths in cities from Chicago, 
St. Louis and Detroit in the Midwest, to Philadelphia, Camden, N.J., 
and Wilmington, Del.

Thursday in Chicago, law enforcement agencies from across the country 
discussed plans to address the threat.

"If you are addicted to heroin, there's never been a better time to 
stop," says Scott Burns of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

Fentanyl is not being used to cut the heroin, but to enhance it. It's 
a high-potency game of Russian roulette. And in the drug world, death 
only increases demand.

"You've got a novice drug user, who thought on a lark they would try 
a nickel bag, and now they're dead," says Dr. Thomas.

"I feel like it's a mass murder thing," says Val Schild, whose 
19-year-old son, Kevin, died in April. "Why are they killing all 
these kids? I don't understand."

The Chicago Recovery Alliance supplies clean needles and other 
services to addicts. Cheryl Hall says dealers have tricked users into 
thinking the drug offers a unique high.

"People will go to any lengths to get it," she says. "Even death. Even death."

In many emergency rooms, the antidote for "the bomb" is taped to the 
walls, at the ready.

"I have now become a pro at handling heroin overdoses, and not by 
choice," says Laura Gallagher, a nurse at Norwegian.

Now nurses like Gallagher know it's not a matter of if, but when the 
next victim arrives.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman