Pubdate: Sat, 03 Nov 2007
Source: Salem News (MA)
Copyright: 2007 Essex County Newspapers
Contact: http://www.ecnnews.com/cgi-bin/05/snother.pl?submitletter
Website: http://www.salemnews.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3466
Author: Matthew K. Roy , Staff Writer, Salem News

OVERDOSE RECOVERY DRUG WILL BE DISTRIBUTED LOCALLY

A medication able to reverse the effects of a heroin  overdose will 
be distributed next month on the North  Shore as part of a state 
program aimed at reducing the  number of drug-related deaths.

CAB Health & Recovery Services of Danvers will be  provided Narcan by 
the state Department of Public  Health. Two doses of the medicine, 
which counteracts a  potentially deadly overdose within minutes, will 
be  included in kits given to heroin addicts.

"We're thrilled that the Department of Public Health is  doing this," 
said Kevin Norton, president of CAB. "It's  one more tool in our 
toolbox that we get to use."

Norton said CAB's outreach to drug users incorporates  "harm 
reduction" education that includes vein care,  prevention of HIV and 
Hepatitis C, and CPR training.  Narcan will supplement CAB's outreach efforts.

"It becomes part of the safety net," Norton said.

The majority of overdoses aren't suicide attempts -  they're 
accidents, Norton said. Narcan, which has been  used in hospital 
emergency rooms and by paramedics for  years, will "absolutely" save 
lives, he said. It will  keep addicts alive until they are ready to 
accept  treatment.

"Recovery is the ultimate goal, but we have to take a  lot of small 
steps before we can get to that big step,"  Norton said.

CAB staffers will teach addicts how to administer  Narcan, which is 
ingested in a mist form. One person  can squirt it up the nose of 
another person who has  overdosed.

Heroin attaches itself to receptors in the brain and  slows a user's 
breathing and heart rate. Within 30 to  90 seconds, Narcan "knocks" 
heroin off the receptors,  Norton said.

In less than two minutes, the user regains  consciousness. He may 
throw up or feel nauseous, and  his or her body typically aches, 
Norton said. But  Narcan, known generically as naloxone, causes no 
long-term side effects, according to specialists. It  effectively 
treats any opiate-related overdose.

Critics of providing Narcan to addicts say it prevents  or delays 
recovery because it gives addicts a sense of  invincibility. Norton 
said there's no evidence to  support that claim, in the same way 
there's no basis to  assert that handing out condoms to prevent the 
spread  of HIV increases sexual activity.

"It's not a glamorous life," Norton said, referring to  drug addicts. 
He said they aren't highly functioning  members of society with 
normal family and professional  lives that Narcan will help them 
maintain. "That's a  distortion," Norton said.

Narcan saved Denise Hansen's son's life. A police  officer told 
Hansen that if the medication had been  administered "two seconds 
later," her son wouldn't have  made it.

"I would think it would be a great idea," Hansen, of  Peabody, said 
about making Narcan more available. "It  would save people from overdosing."

Lori Berry, executive director of the Lynn Community  Health Center, 
said she always comes down on the side  of saving a life.

"Clean needles or making Narcan more available does not  make people 
more likely to abuse heroin," Berry said.  "It prevents infection and 
prevents a death."

The state's kit campaign is being modeled after a  Boston program. 
The state estimates its campaign, which  is being treated as a test 
run, will cost less than  $50,000 and enroll 450 users. If it saves 
lives, it may  be expanded.

Heroin and other opiates killed 544 people in  Massachusetts in 2005. 
With heroin potent, cheap and  easy to get, the problem on the North 
Shore is as bad  as ever.

It's easier for a 15-year-old to buy illegal drugs than  it is to buy 
cigarettes, Norton said.

"The North Shore," he said, "has got an opiate  epidemic."

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Material from The Associated Press was used in this  report.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart