Pubdate: Sun, 21 Aug 2005 Source: New York Times (NY) Section: Sec 14, Col 1, Pg 9, The City Weekly Desk Copyright: 2005 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Maia Szalavitz Note: Maia Szalavitz is a senior fellow at Stats, a media watchdog group Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) THE SHOT THAT SAVES IN the last few weeks, at least six people have died of apparent overdoses of heroin in Lower Manhattan. The news seems shocking, but in fact, it's not. According to the most recent analysis based on data collected from the city's medical examiner, accidental drug overdoses kill more people in New York than homicide or suicide, about 900 a year. In the case of two 18-year-old college students, Maria Pesantez and Mellie Nicole Carballo, the deaths are blamed on overdoses of heroin that was either ' 'too pure" or was cut with poison and was taken with alcohol and cocaine. No matter what the cause, the sad thing about these deaths is that they were preventable with a simple injection. Heroin is an opioid, just like methadone, OxyContin and Vicodin, to name a few. Because overdosing kills by slowly stopping a person's breathing, there is a short time in which a person can be injected with an antidote called naloxone, quickly reversing an opioid overdose. If given early enough, naloxone can prevent damage to the brain caused by lack of oxygen and leave the victim unharmed. According to research by Dr. Sandro Galea of the Center for Urban Epidemiological Studies at the New York Academy of Medicine, at least 75 percent of overdose deaths involve multiple drugs, usually mixtures of heroin and other depressants like alcohol. Removing the opioid from the mix with naloxone is often enough to revive victims. Naloxone itself is virtually harmless. Its most common side effects are withdrawal symptoms like nausea, shakiness and agitation in those who are physically dependent on opioids. While uncomfortable, these symptoms are not dangerous. Rarely, seizures can occur, but this risk is far lower than the risk to those who are not treated. The drug has no effect on those who haven't taken opioids. Pilot programs in Chicago, Baltimore and London that have trained needle-exchange users how to administer naloxone are already credited with saving dozens of lives. In New York, naloxone has been distributed to 300 syringe-exchange participants. In a study conducted by Dr. Galea and his colleagues, 22 New Yorkers were provided with naloxone and trained in its use for first aid. Of the 22 participants, half witnessed an overdose in the three months that they were followed. Naloxone was administered 10 times, and all of those given the drug lived. According to a study published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 57 percent of 1,184 hard drug users interviewed had witnessed at least one overdose. Medical help was sought in only two-thirds of the instances, and this was usually only after efforts to revive the victim by hitting him or rubbing him with ice had failed. In the college students' case, their companions tried putting one of the women in a tub of cold water before dialing 911. But every second is precious when the oxygen supply to the brain is interrupted. More than half of the drug users in the study cited fear of arrest as the main reason for delaying or failing to seek help. That was almost certainly the case in the deaths of Ms. Pesantez and Ms. Carballo, because at least one of their companions had a long history of arrests and convictions for carrying and selling drugs. Without witnesses having to debate whether to call 911 and potentially face arrest or discovery, almost all overdose victims could be saved. So why not make this antidote available not just at needle exchanges, but also in every first aid kit, with every prescription for painkillers like OxyContin and at every methadone clinic? Recently, Gov. George E. Pataki signed a law allowing doctors to prescribe naloxone on request, but for maximum effectiveness, the drug should be available over the counter and provided free when doctors prescribe opioids. That way, it would be on hand if a child gets into his mother's methadone, or a teenager gets into his grandmother's OxyContin, or an addict overdoses at a shooting gallery. What mother wouldn't be grateful to have it in her first-aid kit when she finds an unconscious child -- even if she'd never had any suspicion of drug use, as was the case in the deaths of Ms. Pesantez and Ms. Carballo? And a pre-loaded syringe, like the Epi-Pen used to treat people having allergic reactions to things like bee stings, would make it easy to administer. Some will argue that reducing overdose deaths will encourage drug use. But Dr. Galea says there's no evidence to support this position in the naloxone studies. The same argument was used against needle exchanges, but research never found support for it. And I'd imagine that no matter what their other feelings about drug policy are, the families and friends of all six overdose victims wish naloxone had been on hand in time to save their loved ones. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth