Pubdate: Mon, 15 Jul 2002 Source: Tribune Review (PA) Copyright: 2002 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://triblive.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/460 Author: Bob Stiles Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) DOCTOR: HEROIN USE NOW EPIDEMIC Murder One. Boy On. Brain Damage. Lightning. They are simple words with potentially deadly meanings. They are brand names, often in pink, stamped on heroin packets that have appeared in western Pennsylvania. And some of these "glassine" packets - or others like them - have led to deaths: more than 70 total in Allegheny, Westmoreland and Butler counties this year. "I would say, in my opinion, heroin use is on the rise and could be considered an epidemic," said Dr. Robert Woolhandler, a Pittsburgh drug addiction specialist. "Its use is skyrocketing among kids: college students, school kids, younger kids. I'd call it an epidemic." Several reasons are responsible. Heroin's price is down, while the street costs for other drugs such as the painkiller OxyContin are up. Heroin is available. And it's easy to use, with many snorting the drug rather than injecting it, at least initially. "You go for the cheaper commodity. - It usually becomes an economic decision," Woolhandler said about a user's choice of drugs. Latrobe police Detective Ray Dupilka said a glassine packet - a small wax-paper envelope often blue or white in color with a fraction of a gram of heroin inside - sells for between $20 and $30 in Westmoreland County. In Pittsburgh, from which much of the heroin in western Pennsylvania comes, the same packet could sell for $10, he said. A 40-milligram tablet of OxyContin can be bought on the streets for between $30 and $40, Westmoreland County Detective Tony Marcocci said. "Two years ago, to come across heroin was rare. Now, more often than not, we're finding with these drug users that's the drug of choice," Dupilka said. Hard-core heroin users can consume about 10 packets per day, police sources said. "We're seeing more and more people using and selling despite our efforts to stop it," Marcocci said. David McAdoo, Fayette County Drug and Alcohol Commission executive director, said for some reason people find snorting heroin to be less objectionable than injecting the drug. But either way, it's harmful, he said. "It's just as addictive (snorting heroin) because you're still getting it into your body," McAdoo said. "(Snorting) also is, for a lot of people, a silent introduction." So far this year, Allegheny County has had 47 deaths in which heroin was present in the body, while Butler County has recorded 23 heroin- related deaths and Westmoreland County has seven confirmed deaths related to the drug and possibly an eighth last month in Greensburg. Officials are awaiting test results in that eighth case. The Allegheny County Coroner's Office determined that heroin was present in 73 percent of the 180 deaths determined to be from accidental drug overdoses in 2001. Of that total, 49 deaths resulted from heroin alone, while 131 others stemmed from a combination of heroin and at least one other drug, according to the report "Accidental Drug Overdose Deaths 2001." ACCIDENTAL DEATHS Woolhandler, who also serves as a consultant for the Fayette County drug agency, said most heroin-caused deaths are accidental and result from breathing suppression. He said three reasons typically are responsible for heroin deaths: using a concentration of the drug stronger than the user is accustomed to; positioning of the body after drug use; and "pushing the envelope to get a little higher." Some experts believe a person can become psychologically addicted to heroin with as few as three or four uses. Physical addiction takes longer. "I would say that would take a good month or two of daily usage," said Woolhandler, who is medical consultant to Gateway Rehabilitation Center's Braddock clinic in Allegheny County as well as medical director of Renewal Inc., a downtown Pittsburgh inpatient drug treatment facility. Getting off heroin is difficult. "It's very hard," Woolhandler said. "They have to be very willing and very motivated. The motivation level has to be very high. It's not easy. - I would say, in my opinion, the hardest withdrawal I've seen is with the opiates." Once a person is clean, "you can't use opiates again," he said. "The only treatments are abstinence or going on methadone." McAdoo agreed that stopping heroin use is hard. "One of the complications is the physical dependence," he said. "And it is one of the ones where we see the highest incident of failure in our traditional treatments." Woolhandler uses other drugs at his Pittsburgh facility to try to lessen the side effects for a person withdrawing from heroin. He said the effects are greatest the first two weeks or so of withdrawal. Then other medical and spiritual methods are used to try to help the user stay clean. Chad Johnston, a treatment specialist with The Open Door, an outpatient facility in Indiana County, estimated it would take a motivated hard-core heroin user six months to one year to get off the drug. Many users fail in this effort. "To be honest with you, (the relapse rate) is high," Johnston said. Unlike Westmoreland, Allegheny and Butler counties, neighboring Fayette and Indiana counties have recorded no deaths in 2002 related to heroin, according to coroners' offices in those counties. "Not this year," Indiana Coroner Tom Streams said earlier this month. "I had some last year." Indiana County had three deaths caused by other drugs from Jan. 1 to the beginning of this month, and the Fayette County Coroner's Office reported four fatalities resulting from other drugs. But the lack of heroin-related deaths in 2002 in Indiana and Fayette doesn't mean the substance isn't present in those counties. "We've found a slight increase with heroin," Johnston said. "A lot of it was with OxyContin - which also seems to be on the rise. There just seems to be more of a supply in the area. I think opiates, altogether, are on the rise." GATEWAY DRUG Marcocci describes OxyContin as a "gateway drug" to heroin, with many heroin addicts former OxyContin users. McAdoo said heroin is present in Fayette County, too. "We're hearing a lot of anecdotal reports," he said. "We're not seeing a significant shift (in number of clients on heroin) - but we're hearing of its increased use from our clients and from our police forces." McAdoo said the delay in seeing heroin's use in patient numbers could result because of the time that passes between arrests and sentencing of heroin offenders to treatment programs. It also can take a while before the effects of heroin consumption are apparent in a user's daily life, he said. Some of the heroin in Fayette County is 94 percent or more pure and is coming from central Pennsylvania, the executive director said. "This is what we're being told from our counterparts in other counties. It's coming this way," McAdoo said. Marcocci, a Westmoreland County detective for 23 years, said heroin's presence is strong in Greensburg as well as Latrobe and its surrounding communities. One death and possibly another from the drug occurred in Greensburg this year, according to the coroner's office. And four others involved Derry Township residents. "Do I necessarily know why? No," Dupilka said of the drug's availability in and around Latrobe. "But there's definitely an increase of narcotic use, opiate-derivative use out this way. And we've seen it in other areas of the county." "All kinds of people," Marcocci said in describing heroin users. "We see people from various socioeconomic classes - career people. And the sad thing is, typically the use is hidden until it's too late." Besides the threat of death, heroin use can lead to other offenses. Property crimes can increase because of the user's need for immediate cash. "That's what I would term indicative of heroin use: the thefts, the bad checks, the stolen property. Anything to get quick money," Dupilka said. "When we're investigating bad checks - we've often found heroin is the underlying cause." Officials in Lewistown, a borough of about 10,000 people in central Pennsylvania, blamed a heroin problem for a 400 percent increase in criminal activity a few years ago. Woolhandler and Johnston said drugs also run in cycles: cocaine, crack cocaine, OxyContin, heroin. "There's always something out there," Woolhandler said. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel