Pubdate: Wed, 10 May 2000 Source: Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 2000 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. Contact: 400 N. Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19101 Website: http://www.phillynews.com/inq/ Forum: http://interactive.phillynews.com/talk-show/ Author: Sudarsan Raghavan, Inquirer Staff Writer HEROIN TREATMENT LAGS FAR BEHIND NEED TO HELP USERS Experts Testified Before Congress About How Limited And Underfunded Intervention Options Are WASHINGTON - Facilities to treat heroin addicts are scarce or inadequate, even though the drug is hooking younger, middle-class addicts in the Philadelphia suburbs and elsewhere, experts and addicts told a congressional panel yesterday. "More middle-class and suburban youths are being introduced to heroin," Charles O'Brien, director of the Center for Studies of Addiction at the University of Pennsylvania, testified. "We even have [Penn] university students involved in this." He called on Congress to "implement the next phase of our nation's war on drugs - ensuring that all of our heroin addicts have access to effective treatment options." Testifying before the Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control, O'Brien and seven others - including four recovering teenage addicts - described how heroin is seeping into middle-class America. They complained that parents had trouble finding places to treat their children. Most managed-care health plans and government-funded programs provided limited treatment options and inadequate time in treatment facilities to wean teenagers off the narcotic, which costs less than $10 per stamp-size bag, they said, good for one or two doses. "Increasingly, calls for help about heroin are coming from the suburbs, and from parents, for the suburbs are heroin's latest venue, and the targets are teens," said Mitchell S. Rosenthal, president of Phoenix House, a nonprofit agency that runs substance-abuse treatment centers in eight states, though not in Pennsylvania or New Jersey. "What they need is treatment - the right kind of treatment, for the right length of time." Bill would provide $60 million One of the lawmakers presiding over the hearing, Sen. Charles Grassley (R., Iowa), introduced legislation yesterday that would provide as much as $60 million in the first year for adolescent-treatment programs, family-support programs, antidrug community coalitions and research into heroin abuse. Besides more federal funding for treatment, Sen. Joseph Biden (D., Del.), cochairman of the panel, said yesterday he would like to direct more money to fighting drugs in Colombia, where much of the heroin is grown. The narcotic is cheaper and purer than in the past, allowing users to snort or smoke it and to avoid needles and diseases such as AIDS. Heroin-related deaths have shot up in the Philadelphia region, from 2 per 100,000 people in 1990 to 9 per 100,000 in 1998, according to an Inquirer analysis of medical-examiner data. Last year, heroin-related arrests by Philadelphia police accounted for 23 percent of all narcotics arrests, up from 8 percent in 1992. Heroin arrests by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency, which targets mainly large-scale traffickers, accounted for 40 percent of all drug arrests in the region last year, up from 13 percent in 1992. Addicts are getting younger. According to the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the average age of first-time heroin users dropped to 17 in 1997 from 27 in 1988. In the Philadelphia and New Jersey suburbs, a third of those receiving treatment for heroin addiction were 24 and under in 1998, up from 24 percent in 1995. The treatment gap Rosenthal testified there was a significant treatment gap. Certain parts of the country have few substance-abuse treatment facilities of any kind; some states do not even have methadone programs, he said. Penn's O'Brien suggested that new medications to treat heroin abuse, such as buprenorphine and naloxone, should be made available besides methadone, which is used to treat mostly older, long-term addicts. One reason for more options is that traditional three-to four-week rehabilitation programs, favored by most private health plans and government-funded clinics, often do not cure young heroin users of their addictions, Rosenthal said. There are an estimated 14,000 slots in long-term residential facilities nationwide - but of those only about 2,500 were for adolescents, he said. Three of the four teenage addicts who testified said in interviews yesterday that they had attended short rehab programs, only to start using heroin again when they left. "Insurance companies don't acknowledge this addiction as a disease and do not give adequate time for rehabilitation," testified Marie Allen of Newark, Del., whose daughter Erin died of a heroin overdose at 21. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea