Pubdate: Fri, 24 Mar 2000 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Francisco Chronicle Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/ Author: Edward Epstein, Chronicle Staff Writer TREATMENT OF HEROIN USERS' SORES COST S.F. UP TO $40 MILLION YEARLY SAN FRANCISCO -- San Francisco spends as much as $40 million a year treating abscesses in heroin users, including infections caused by the terrible flesh-eating bacteria, a supervisors committee was told yesterday. ``It is horrific, if you've ever, ever been unfortunate enough to witness the people suffering from this,'' Supervisor Gavin Newsom said of the abscess infections, which bring about 12 patients a day to the San Francisco General Hospital emergency room. About half of them are admitted for surgery, which often results in extensive scarring or amputations. The abscesses are associated with injecting heroin into muscles instead of veins. The same black tar heroin that is responsible for the rising number of abscesses is also behind the city's large number of heroin overdoses. The heroin is growing more popular because its price is dropping and it is purer and more powerful than the heroin that used to be sold on the streets. ``San Francisco is experiencing a disproportionate burden,'' Newsom said at the hearing of the Public Health and Environment Committee. ``There are more abscesses than we've ever seen and (the cases are) clogging the emergency room.'' In fact, Dr. Joshua Bamberger, a researcher with the city Department of Public Health, said the abscesses are the leading cause of patient admissions to the hospital. Anyone who wants to know why the department faces a $15 million budget deficit this year should look no further than the heroin-related abscesses, he said. The hospital handled 4,300 abscess cases in 1998-99, up from fewer than 3,000 in 1995-96. He said the total cost to the city is as much as $40million a year, including $18 million for inpatient care and millions more for emergency room care, follow-up and paramedics' time. Most of the addicts coming in for abscesses are uninsured and ineligible for Medicaid, meaning that the city picks up the cost of treating them. The health department is seeking $1 million in Mayor Willie Brown's new budget to set up a wound care center at the hospital, where heroin users could go without tying up the emergency room and surgeons. The money would also pay for a mobile clinic that could go out on the street, along with needle exchange workers, to treat abscesses before they get serious. Bamberger said the city must persuade addicts to keep themselves clean, which gives the bacteria less chance to grow on their skin, and expand methadone treatment so people don't go back to using heroin after the current standard of three weeks of treatment. The scarring from the abscesses can ruin lives, recovering addict Tracey Helton told the supervisors. ``In the last years of my addiction I thought I'd never be hired or a job because my scarring is so extensive on my legs that I couldn't cover them, even with panty hose,'' she said. ``The self-esteem issues on scarring are tremendous because people feel they will never be accepted back into society,'' said Helton, who now helps other addicts through the SAGE (Standing Against Global Exploitation) Project. Bamberger told the supervisors that 143 people died of heroin overdoses in San Francisco in 1998, but that users on methadone are 20 times less likely to die from overdose. That led Newsom to press his case for the city to get a federal waiver that would allow private doctors to dispense methadone to patients and to extend the detoxification treatment from 21 days to include several more weeks. Methadone is now dispensed only at city-run programs. Newsom expects such a federal and state waiver in little more than a year. Bamberger said the city has to do more outreach to heroin users to prevent overdoses. One step would be to tell addicts not to mix alcohol with heroin, since that combination spurs overdose symptoms. He and other speakers also said users and their friends have to be convinced that the police won't come along when paramedics are summoned. Dr. Andrew Moss, a professor at the University of California at San Francisco, reported findings of a study of 213 young heroin users in the city that showed that paramedics were called in only 52 percent of overdoses. Twenty-two percent who didn't call 911 were afraid of being arrested, but only 5 percent of the users reported being arrested following an overdose. San Francisco police don't accompany paramedics on medical calls. ``We need the police to tell users it's not department policy to go along,'' Bamberger said. Another more controversial and probably illegal suggestion was for setting up a ``safe injection room patterned after a program in Frankfurt, Germany. Addicts can come to a supervised location where they are given clean needles and their injections are observed by professionals. Another suggestion was for the city to try a pilot program of distributing Naloxone to addicts. This drug can quickly counteract the symptoms of an overdose. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg