Pubdate: Sun, 25 Aug 2002 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA) Page: 1 Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Clea Benson, Inquirer Staff Writer AREA EMERGENCY ROOMS SEE MOST OVERDOSES IN NATION The Eight-County Region Also Has One Of The Highest Rates Of Drug-Related Deaths In The U.S., A Federal Study Reports. Drug abusers sought help in Philadelphia-area emergency rooms at a greater rate last year than in any other U.S. metropolitan area. A new federal survey of emergency-room data from metropolitan areas across the country also found that young adults and teenagers in Philadelphia and its suburbs were more likely to seek emergency care for bad reactions to drugs. The annual survey, known as the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN), tracks emergency-room visits caused by the use of illegal drugs and the recreational use of prescription drugs. It attempts to measure the impact of drug abuse on the nation's health. Earlier this year, the survey also reported that people in this region were dying of drug overdoses at one of the nation's highest rates. The figures showed that the Baltimore region had the highest fatality rate, followed closely by Philadelphia, New Orleans and Phoenix. The overdose survey drew upon reports from 2000 from hospitals in Philadelphia and the seven counties in Pennsylvania and South Jersey that surround the city. It found that 937 men and women overdosed in the region that year. For years, the eight-county area, along with other metropolitan regions such as Baltimore, has ranked near the top in the agency's measurement of drug abuse's impact on health. Local health experts said it wasn't clear exactly why Philadelphia would report the most serious problem this time, but it was hardly surprising in an area that includes so many urban cores - such as those in Philadelphia, Camden and Chester City. "I think any East Coast inner city has a lot of drug use, whether it's measured by the emergency department or the police department," said Jeanmarie Perrone, director of medical toxicology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania's emergency department. Perrone said she had seen similar rates of drug-related problems when she worked in emergency rooms in Baltimore and New York. In Philadelphia, drug abusers suffering from racing hearts, shortness of breath, chest pain or other symptoms turn up often at Perrone's hospital. "We see a lot, a lot, a lot of crack-cocaine use," Perrone said. Local health officials use the federal survey data, in conjunction with research from the Drug Enforcement Administration, to keep an eye on which drugs are most popular among local users. The Philadelphia Health Department also conducts focus-group discussions twice a year with drug users in Philadelphia jails to find out about the latest trends. "You take these indicators in conjunction with each other, and a story about substance abuse in an area starts to emerge," said Mark R. Bencivengo, who oversees the drug-and-alcohol-abuse office of the Philadelphia Health Department. That story is centered on cocaine. Last year, cocaine sent local residents to emergency rooms 11,358 times - a number that has held relatively steady since the crack epidemic peaked in the late 1980s. In 1980, before crack hit Philadelphia, only 79 people visited emergency rooms for cocaine-related problems. The federal study released last week showed that area hospitals had seen steady increases over the last five years in the use of such narcotics as heroin, ecstasy, and PCP, and in the mixing of alcohol with other drugs. There has been a statistically huge, tenfold increase over the last five years in emergency-room patients who have taken ecstasy, a drug long popular among middle-class clubgoers. However, the overall number of users of ecstasy - or X, as it is sometime called - was still tiny compared with those who had ingested what experts call "primary drugs of abuse," such as cocaine and heroin. Last year, 203 people who sought treatment showed evidence of ecstasy use. "X seems to be moving into more of what we would call the street-level drug culture, whereas it had been confined largely to the rave scene and clubs," Bencivengo said. "It is becoming considerably more widespread." The biggest trend that local health officials worry about is heroin, which is the purest in the nation here, Bencivengo said. For 30 years, heroin was cut with other substances to the point that it was only about 5 percent pure. It now arrives in Philadelphia from South America at about 70 percent purity, Bencivengo said. That means it's strong enough for local users to get high by smoking it, rather than the more common method of injecting it. "If purity drops off dramatically, people who are using the drug may turn to injection to get the effects," Bencivengo said. "We could see a blip up in needle use, which then opens up the specter of HIV transmission." Bencivengo said he was keeping an eye on methamphetamines, which have become increasingly popular in Western states but accounted for only 60 visits to area hospitals last year. "Back in the 1970s, Philadelphia was the meth capital of the U.S.," he said. "Now, it's not even on the radar screen. Hopefully, we won't see anything sweep the drug scene the way that cocaine did." The DAWN survey found there were 252 drug-related emergency-room visits for every 100,000 people nationwide in 2001. In Philadelphia and the seven counties surrounding it, the rate was twice as high with 573 visits to emergency rooms for every 100,000 people. Philadelphia's 18-to-25-year-olds, who had 1,048 drug-related emergency-room visits per 100,000 people in 2001, were far more likely to seek emergency drug treatment than their peers in other regions. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth