Pubdate: Sat, 26 Dec 2009
Source: Herald News, The (Fall River, MA)
Copyright: 2009 The Herald News
Contact:  http://www.heraldnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3604
Author: Grant Welker
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone)

REPORT: STATE NEEDS TO DO MORE TO CURB ADDICTION - FALL

The opiate problem isn't new in Fall River, where in  2002 police
seized 3 pounds of heroin valued at $1.2  million following an
eight-month investigation.

Massachusetts has long had an opiate problem, too, but  a 70-page
report released last month from the state  OxyContin and Heroin
Commission refocused attention on  the issue.

The state, the report said, is "in the midst of a  serious and
dangerous epidemic" of soaring heroin and  opiate use, while support
for treatment programs  remains insufficient.

The number of deaths these addictions cause -- more  than 3,200 in
Massachusetts from 2002 to 2007 -- far  exceeds causes of death that
receive far more  attention, the report said.

"If the H1N1 virus killed 3,000 people in a five-year  period in
Massachusetts, the crisis would be center  stage," it said. Over the
same period, the number of  Bay State soldiers killed in Afghanistan
and Iraq was  78.

A 2008 report by the U.S. Drug Enforcement  Administration said heroin
in Massachusetts is cheap  and "readily available," and that abuse is
"widespread." OxyContin is "extremely popular" and  often a gateway
drug to heroin, it said.

Rhode Island has a similar problem with heroin, which  "can be
purchased in nearly every town and city," the  report said.

Ease of access is a significant contributor.

Nationally, 60 percent of pain relievers used for  non-medical reasons
are given free by relatives or  friends, a report cited by the
commission said. In  Massachusetts, the number of prescriptions for
opiates  more than doubled from 1996 to 2007.

One Cape Cod doctor illustrates that problem. According  to the state,
Michael Brown prescribed nearly one-third  of all OxyContin
prescriptions statewide -- almost  290,000 tablets in 2004 alone.

In Fall River, near a New York-Providence-Boston drug  route, heroin
is also cheap. One OxyContin pill,  depending on the size, can sell
for $80 to $150,  according to the Bristol County district attorney's
office. A bag of heroin is somewhere between $3 and  $10.

Opiate abuse cases are common partly because  Massachusetts lags in
devoting funding to prevention,  treatment and research, according to
a report released  in May by the National Center on Addiction and
Substance Abuse. For every $100 the state spends on  drug addiction,
only $1.45 goes toward prevention,  treatment and research.

Massachusetts ranks in the lower third of all states,  at nearly half
the average of $2.38 and well behind  Connecticut, the leader at $10.39.

The state commission report made 20 broad  recommendations, including
raising awareness to  children at a young age of the dangers of drugs,
  overhauling the state's prescription-monitoring program  to ensure
patients aren't getting illegal  prescriptions, and diverting addicts
from jail  sentences to treatment programs.

It said prescriptions for controlled substances should  be written on
official state prescription pads with  tamper-resistant features, and
hospitals should be  forced to report to parents if their child
suffers an  overdose.

FIXING THE PROBLEM

Fall River is in the second year of a federally funded  three-year
opiate prevention program that provides  education and outreach for
opiate addicts, their  families and friends, and health care providers.

Only 12 cities statewide were given money to adopt the
program.

With $100,000 in funding each of the three years, the  program, Power
2 Save Lives, works with Seven Hills  Behavioral Health to talk to
patients monthly at SSTAR  and Steppingstone, and partners with the
BOLD  Coalition.

The program is also seeking to eliminate barriers to  contacting
emergency responders during an overdose by  supporting a bill in the
state Senate that protects  overdose victims and witnesses from drug
possession  charges. Many witnesses to drug overdoses don't call  911
for fear of police involvement, the 911 Good  Samaritan Campaign says.

The state commission's report has "moved the ball a  little bit" in
the fight for addiction services reform,  said Sen. Steven Tolman, a
Boston Democrat who chaired  the commission. Tolman also sponsored the
Good  Samaritan bill.

Since the report was released, the state has hired  someone whose sole
duty is to re-establish a  prescription-monitoring program, Tolman
said. The  senator has met with companies working on tamper-proof
prescription forms and a pill that blocks brain  receptors that react
to heroin. Next month, he'll meet  with Gov. Deval Patrick and Lt.
Gov. Tim Murray to  discuss opiate addiction.

Local service providers and those who have faced opiate  addiction
firsthand largely agreed with the  commission's recommendations and
emphasized more drug  education in schools, better monitoring by
parents,  closer tracking of illegal prescriptions and easier  access
to treatment.

"Everything in schools is geared on getting better test  grades, and
health is out the window," said Nancy  Paull, the chief executive
officer of Stanley Street  Treatment and Resources, or SSTAR.

Drug danger is "not being taught because it can't be  measured by
MCAS," she said. "That's a huge mistake."

Karen Fischer, staff director for the BOLD Coalition, a  Fall River
substance abuse prevention organization,  estimates that only one in
10 addicts that need  treatment are receiving it. And keeping
youngsters from  picking up the habit is especially important. Someone
  who uses a substance before turning 15 has a 45 percent  chance of
becoming addicted to that or another drug,  she said.

Someone who uses a substance at age 21 or older has  less than a 5
percent chance.

That shows how important early prevention is, Fisher  said. "There has
to be zero tolerance."

Dee Bettencourt, whose 20-year-old son was killed in a  drug deal,
said parents should be constantly looking  for signs that their
children could be doing drugs and  to question them if things don't
seem right. If she  could go back in time, she said, she would have
been  more forceful in getting her son help.

Liisa Bennett, whose son has struggled with an  addiction since
receiving a painkiller prescription at  age 15, said creating
treatment programs in jail would  go a long way toward ensuring that
addicts don't  relapse once they are released.

But if only a few of the commission's recommendations  are put into
place, all the work invested in the report  will do little, Bennett
said.

"If it's not all enacted, we'll never get a hold of  this epidemic,"
she said. "I have a hard time digesting  that this is such a bad thing
and people aren't  outraged all around, whether they're directly
impacted  or not." 
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