Pubdate: Tue, 07 Jul 2015
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 2015 The Washington Post Company
Contact:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
Author: Meredith Cohn, Baltimore Sun

HEALTH OFFICIALS TRY TO HALT RISE OF FENTANYL-LACED HEROIN DEATHS

Amid a statewide surge in overdoses, Baltimore health officials 
announced a campaign Monday to tell heroin users that the drug they 
buy on the street could contain the much more potent painkiller fentanyl.

The synthetic opiod, which federal officials say is 30 to 50 times as 
powerful as heroin, is blamed in the deaths of hundreds of drug users 
nationwide since 2013.

Health officials, law enforcement authorities and counselors began 
issuing warnings more than a year ago but have not been able to stem overdoses.

In Maryland, fentanyl-related deaths account for nearly a quarter of 
drug overdose deaths, up from 4 percent two years ago. 
Fentanyl-related deaths have eclipsed deaths related to cocaine and 
alcohol and are gaining on those attributed to prescription drugs.

Baltimore has been hit particularly hard. The 39 deaths in the city 
linked to fentanyl in the first quarter of the year are up from the 
14 recorded in the same period last year. They account for more than 
half of the 73 fentanyl-related deaths in Maryland during the first 
three months of 2015.

"It's unclear why it's happening in Baltimore now, but it is a trend 
throughout the state and country," said Leana Wen, the city's health 
commissioner. "Our goal is to alert the public, alert residents that 
hero in my be laced with fentanyl."

Baltimore City led the state in fentanyl-related deaths last year 
with 71. Baltimore County was second with 36; Anne Arundel County was 
third with 23.

One of the recent victims was Crystal Moulden, a 16-year-old Glen 
Burnie girl who was found in a Baltimore alley last month. Her family 
said she was a straight-A student and cheerleader until she began 
drinking and smoking marijuana. Eventually she turned to harder 
drugs, they said.

"It's very concerning, especially when we hear reports about people 
who don't know what they are using," Wen said. "They think they're 
using heroin only.

"[Fentanyl] stops their breathing within a minute or so because it's 
so powerful."

Public health officials say they lack good data on how to effectively 
warn users about the dangers. Baltimore is using trusted workers from 
its needle exchange program, in operation for two decades, to spread 
"lifesaving tips" - rather than telling users to quit heroin.

They tell users to avoid drugs that have different colors or 
textures, warn against using drugs when they're alone and show them 
how to use the overdose medication naloxone. They also can steer 
people to addiction treatment.

"The idea is to keep people alive today so they can make better 
choices tomorrow," Wen said.

Fentanyl, used by cancer patients and those with chronic pain, is 
prescribed legally to millions of Americans each year. It produces 
euphoric effects similar to those of heroin but is far more powerful, 
making it particularly dangerous.

Fentanyl overdose deaths surged in 2005 and continued for two years 
until the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration shut down a single lab 
in Mexico. But cases began climbing again in 2014, particularly in 
the Northeast and California.

Deaths related to fentanyl in Maryland tripled to 185 last year from 
58 in 2013, state data show. Baltimore made up more than a third of the total.

Heroin deaths in general also are rising, with 578 people succumbing 
last year, up 25 percent from the previous year and more than double 
the 2010 total.

Gov. Larry Hogan (R) has formed a task force on heroin that has been 
visiting all corners of the state and expects to send recommendations 
to him by year's end.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom