Pubdate: Fri, 08 Oct 2004 Source: Cyprus Mail, The (Cyprus) Copyright: Cyprus Mail 2004 Contact: http://www.cyprus-mail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/100 Author: John Leonidou Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) HEROIN CLAIMS ANOTHER LIFE A 26-YEAR-OLD man was found dead on Wednesday night after a suspected heroin overdose. It is reported that the young man was a regular drug user. The young man, who was living with his parents and was found unconscious by his father on the couch, was pronounced dead by police who arrived at the house after being alerted by the father. State coroner, Sophocles Sophocleous, dismissed any suspicions of foul play but did say that a drug overdose could have been the cause of death for the 26-year-old. If it were revealed that the youngster did die of an overdose, it would be the fourteenth case of its kind this year. Dr George Poyiadjis who works for the Open Therapeutic Community for Addicted Persons (TOLMI), told Politis newspaper that he spoke to the unfortunate youngster the night he died, "That night he called me up and told me that he decided to stop taking drugs and that the last couple of days he was trying to detoxify himself in his own home." A saddened Poyiadjis further mentioned how the youngster's situation had improved recently and that after going clean for nine months was even going to college and thinking about his future. Poyiadjis further mentioned the need for the government to focus more on therapy for drug addicts. "It is time we all woke up and tackled this problem" According to the European monitoring centre for drugs and drug addicts, since 1995, the Ministry's of Health's Mental Health Services have been collecting data from inpatient and outpatient therapeutic centres in Cyprus. The number of persons seeking treatment has been increasing constantly from 1995 till 2003 with the most popular primary drugs of choice among patients in 2002 being heroin, 54.5 per cent, cannabis, 27 per cent, and cocaine, eight per cent. The number of patients dependent on heroin has been on the increase since 1998. In 2003, 65 per cent of all treatment seekers and 85 per cent of heroin users reported injecting drug use as their most common route of administration, 95 per cent of which were current injectors. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin