Pubdate: Sat, 22 Jan 2005 Source: Patriot Ledger, The (MA) Copyright: 2005 The Patriot Ledger Contact: http://ledger.southofboston.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1619 Author: Shamus McGillicuddy, The Patriot Ledger Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) CHEAP HEROIN, COSTLY ADDICTION Low-Cost Drug Feeds Growing Number of S. Shore Addicts OxyContin is addictive and expensive. Heroin is cheaper and available. Both are fueling what police and health officials say is a steady rise in addiction on the South Shore that is dangerous and in some cases lethal. "It's not like marijuana and cocaine," Marshfield Detective Jeff Brennan said. "People you would never think would do drugs, if they get prescribed (OxyContin) for a back problem, some of them get hooked. They become junkies." The numbers back him up: . More than 3,300 people who said they lived on the South Shore identified themselves as heroin users when they checked into drug treatment programs in 2003. That's been going up an average of more than 10 percent a year since 1995. . In 1998, two people between 17 and 20 years old were arrested on the South Shore for possession of heroin. That number was up to 17 last year, according to a Patriot Ledger review of police and court records. But it is the people, not the numbers, that tell the most frightening story. Stoughton police received a cell phone call last week from a pair of teenage girls. Their 16-year-old friend had overdosed on heroin, and the man who allegedly supplied her with the drug had abandoned the three of them on the side of a road. Police said the girl was unconscious and not breathing when officers got to the scene and picked her up from a snow bank. Joanne Peterson is a founder of Learn to Cope, a group affiliated with the Norfolk County District Attorney's office. She learned that her son was addicted to heroin two years ago when he was 19. "He was at a party with friends and a mirror went around with (heroin) lines on it," she said. "I noticed he drastically changed in a very short period of time. Their look changes. Their voice changes. They're up all night. They sleep all day. I didn't know what it was. I knew whatever it was, was something bad. "Unfortunately, heroin and OxyContin are not something you can experiment with," Peterson said. "It's addictive. I don't think they realize it will take their lives the way it does. They're dying everyday." Growing Addiction Those are not isolated cases. The problem has been growing on the South Shore, particularly in smaller communities and especially in the past five years. State statistics gathered at drug treatment centers show heroin users on the South Shore - once only a handful in smaller communities - now number in the hundreds. The rise in heroin and OxyContin use is straining police departments, filling addiction treatment centers, and destroying families, experts say. "The amount of heroin that we have seen or are seeing is double what we saw 10 years ago," Hanson Police Chief Edward F. Savage III said. "I hesitate to speak for other communities, but what I'm seeing is an increase in possession of heroin and ... ecstasy." High Point Treatment Center, located in Plymouth and New Bedford, offers substance abuse services to people all over Southeastern Massachusetts. "The trend over the last five years has definitely been upward," High Point Executive Director Daniel Mumbauer said of heroin use. Young Users "About 60 percent of folks we see coming into detox today say heroin is their drug of choice," Mumbauer said. He said treatment centers are seeing more admissions for OxyContin, too. "They (OxyContin users) tend to be younger folks, 18 to 24. It tends to be someone stealing (a prescription) from parents and experimenting with it. The fear is experimenting with OxyContin is very expensive. Then heroin is very cheap. So they go to heroin because of the cheapness of it," Mumbauer said. OxyContin and heroin are chemical cousins. OxyContin, a prescription drug, is a synthetic opiate prescribed for pain management. It is highly addictive and very expensive. A single pill typically costs $20 to $80 on the street, while a bag of heroin costs between $3 and $5. Heroin is cheaper and more pure than it has ever been, making it a good and cheap alternative for OxyContin addicts. The state does not compile statistics on OxyContin addiction. Savage, the Hanson police chief, said the users of heroin in his community range in age from 18 to 25, and many are committing robbery and burglary to feed their habits. Savage said Hanson has not seen much OxyContin use yet, but Marshfield police say their town and many other South Shore communities are seeing an epidemic of OxyContin addiction. Brennan, the Marshfield detective, said his department arrested a 20-year-old man last month for allegedly forcing a 13-year-old boy to steal OxyContin from his mother. In October Marshfield police arrested a 16-year-old boy at Marshfield High School for OxyContin possession. In September they arrested two men, age 26 and 27, for armed robbery. When they arrested them, police discovered 200 OxyContin pills in their home. Brennan said heroin hasn't become a problem in Marshfield yet, but knows there are people selling the drug in town. Narcotics Numbers The state Department of Public Health keeps statistics on admissions to treatment centers, including what drugs people say they use. According to those statistics, just 17 residents of the state representative district that includes Hanover, Norwell and Rockland admitted to using heroin in 1995. By 2003 those communities had 105 heroin users. In the district that includes Hanson, Pembroke and parts of Duxbury and Halifax, the number climbed from 17 to 175 heroin users. Numbers also climbed more than 40 percent among Quincy and Weymouth residents. Additionally, there were 42 heroin overdoses in Quincy in 2003 alone. Families Torn Apart Experts say the upswing in heroin use and addiction is tearing families apart. Parents in Hanson and Marshfield have started support groups for families coping with drug-addicted children. Learn to Cope, the Norfolk County district attorney's group, helped Peterson, but there were things the family had to do for itself. Peterson said she got her son treatment for his addiction, paying $900 a week out of her own pocket because health insurance wouldn't cover in-patient treatment. "He's gotten a lot out of it," she said. "But it's a struggle. It's a lifelong disease." Martha, a Quincy woman, said her 22-year-old son has battled OxyContin addiction for two years. She threw him out of her house at least twice. It was the hardest decision she ever made. "There were times when I hated my son," she said. "I was so angry at him. Sometimes I would wish I wouldn't see him again. And then you have these guilty feelings, that you're a failure as a parent." She helped check him in to several addiction treatment centers, but he would keep relapsing. Martha's son has been in a Mississippi treatment center since late August and will be released from the program soon. Martha is nervous about him moving back to Massachusetts, where his problems began. "... As hard as it is, I would rather my son be healthy and alive than come back here and fall into the same pit," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake