Pubdate: Sun, 01 Mar 2015
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
Copyright: 2015 The Baltimore Sun Company
Contact:  http://www.baltimoresun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37
Authors: Ian Duncan and Mark Puente

HOGAN WADES INTO MD.'S ONGOING HEROIN BATTLE

Governor Creates Panels to Focus More on Prevention and Treatment of Addiction

"We're not just reacting to the sudden surge of overdoses and 
overdoses deaths. We're taking a holistic approach."

With the creation of two panels devoted to combating heroin use, Gov. 
Larry Hogan has waded into a worsening crisis - one that has defied 
solutions for decades.

It once looked as if Maryland had brought some measure of control to 
its long-standing battle against the drug, driving down fatal 
overdose rates for years. In Baltimore, for example, overdose deaths 
plunged from more than 300 in 1999 to around 100 in 2010.

Then came a collective relapse.

Statewide deaths have climbed each year since 2010 and could top 500 
when statistics for 2014 are finalized. The problem has also appeared 
to take on troubling new dimensions, with growing numbers of addicts 
in suburban and rural areas.

But identifying the factors behind those trends, along with 
developing an effective response, has not been easy. For years, 
officials in Maryland and across the nation have struggled to balance 
the sometimes conflicting approaches of law enforcement and public health.

The rising tide of deaths has been blamed on an explosion in the 
rates at which doctors prescribed opiate painkillers in the past 
decade followed by a federal law enforcement crackdown that drove 
addicts to seek out heroin instead. At the same time, the incredibly 
potent drug fentanyl has been mixed into some of the state's heroin 
supply and has been blamed for scores of deaths last year.

Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford, the governor's point man on the heroin 
issue, said previous approaches have been reactions to an increase in 
overdose deaths and have focused too much on driving down those numbers.

"When you're taking that approach, you're really at the end of the 
line," he said.

The task force that Hogan announced last week will have a more 
ambitious agenda, Rutherford said. It will explore prevention and 
treatment efforts, as well as ways to reduce the pipeline of illegal 
drugs throughout Maryland. One of the main goals is reducing the 
number of people addicted to opiates and heroin.

"We're not just reacting to the sudden surge of overdoses and 
overdoses deaths," he said. "We're taking a holistic approach."

In addition to the task force, which is scheduled to report back by 
Dec. 1, Hogan created a coordinating council of the agencies involved 
in tackling the heroin problem - a group that mirrors one set up by 
former Gov. Martin O'Malley in June. Hogan also announced a donation 
of equipment for the rapid treatment of heroin overdoses, and a 
$500,000 federal grant to increase treatment programs in the state's 
jails and prisons.

One of those Hogan appointed to the task force is Tracey 
Myers-Preston, executive director of the Maryland Addictions Directors Council.

Lynn Albizo, a spokeswoman for the council, credited O'Malley for 
working to reduce addiction but said the new task force will bring a 
broader range of professionals to the table. Under O'Malley, she 
said, only workers from state agencies were involved in the work to 
decrease overdoses.

"What O'Malley did was the first step," she said. "This task force 
will take a different approach and get more input from the community. 
It's a treatment approach instead of a criminal justice approach."

Beth McGinty, a professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of 
Public Health, said the image of the crisis as one that affects 
suburbanites as well as city residents might have opened a route for 
that switch.

"We've got this whole group of heroin users who started out using 
prescription opioids," she said. "Many of these folks started out 
using these drugs legitimately."

McGinty said the journey of the addict who travels from pain patient 
to heroin user is easier to understand and sympathize with than that 
of an urban addict whose typical route to drug use is less clear and 
easier to blame on personal moral failings.

"The rhetoric among policymakers and among medical experts, the 
opinion leaders, I think, is very different than it has been in the 
past," McGinty said. Still, she said, her polling statistics show 
that respondents look down at abusers of prescription pills, as well 
as urban heroin addicts.

The fight to stop heroin addiction has raged for years. In the 1970s, 
police seized the initiative with the launch of the war on drugs. But 
health advocates have long had a voice in the debate -and it has 
become louder in recent years.

A public health approach is the best way to fight substance abuse, 
and Baltimore has already made good progress, city Health

Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford, the Hogan administration point man on the 
heroin issue Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen said, pointing out that 
heroin was a problem in Baltimore before it hit many other cities.

With indicators showing that the enforcement of drug laws has fallen 
heavily on African-American communities, and with states across the 
country looking to cut their corrections budgets, an increased 
emphasis on treatment could be an appealing option.

In Baltimore, officials convened their own task force in October; it 
was given nine months to develop strategies to better coordinate 
treatment options. The quasi-public Behavioral Health System 
Baltimore oversees the city task force, which has about 50 members, 
including representatives from law enforcement, faith groups and the 
mayor's office.

Studies have estimated that it costs from about $26,000 to $38,000 
annually to incarcerate a drug offender in Maryland, according to 
Behavioral Health System Baltimore.

Costs for treatment vary by the level of care and the length of a 
program, but the estimate is about $5,300, the group said.

Wen said one of her priorities is to re-energize and fight substance 
abuse in Baltimore. Because substance abuse is a chronic medical 
condition, a multi-pronged approach is needed, she said.

To reduce addiction, Wen said, it is crucial to screen individuals 
for the problem when they are seen by medical professionals or social 
workers. There should be a single phone number that people can call 
for "treatment on demand," so they can get help when they need it.

Meanwhile, there has also been some progress in addressing a pathway 
to heroin addiction.

Under a new program, the state can closely monitor how opiate 
medicines are being dispensed and monitor anyone who seems to be 
filling out multiple prescriptions. McGinty said that's worthwhile, 
but there still needs to be more research on how to stop people 
switching from pills to heroin.

There is also some indication that doctors themselves are recognizing 
the risks associated with the powerful pain pills they prescribe. A 
survey published this month in the American Medical Association's 
internal medicine journal found that doctors regularly saw problems 
with patients to whom they prescribed opioids, even those who follow 
the directions.

About half of the doctors surveyed said that over the past year they 
had become less likely to dole out those medicines. "Primary care 
physicians appear to recognize many elements of the prescription drug 
abuse epidemic," the surveyors wrote.

For all the ideas and political attention now being devoted to heroin 
addiction, some involved in the struggle at ground level complain 
that the governor's office is missing the point.

Among them is Wynwood "Woody" Curry, a former clinical-associate 
director at Baltimore Station, a recovery program for men who are 
homeless largely because of chronic substance abuse.

He is skeptical of creating another government task force, and said 
addiction, treatment and task forces have become buzz words for 
politicians on the campaign trail. He believes programs must focus on 
potent, underlying issues such as poverty and mental health that can 
set the stage for addiction.

"I don't think they understand the problem," said Curry, a 
72-year-old Vietnam veteran who has been working to reduce addiction 
in Baltimore for more than 40 years. "It's a much more complex 
problem than drug use. Addiction is more powerful."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom