Pubdate: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 Source: Times Of Malta (Malta) Copyright: 2005 Allied Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.timesofmalta.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2310 Author: Cynthia Busuttil Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) MOST DRUG OVERDOSE DEATHS CAUSED BY HEROIN Heroin was used in 95 per cent of fatal overdoses from illicit drugs that took place in Malta between 1999 and 2003, Anna Girard, head of the national focal point for drugs and drug addiction, said. In the five-year period under review, 31 fatal overdoses took place, with 27 of the victims being male. The mean age of victims was 32 years. Ms Girard said that in the same timeframe there were nine fatal overdoses from non-illicit drugs. Four of the victims were aged between 25 and 34 years while five were over the age of 45. She explained that between 1995 and 2003 there were 277 non-fatal overdoses caused by illicit drugs while 1,092 non-fatal overdoses resulted from pills and the combination of alcohol and pills. In 2003 there were 15 non-fatal overdoses from illicit drugs and 149 from pills. The majority of the victims - 96 - were females. The national focal point, under the auspices of the National Commission On The Abuse Of Drugs, Alcohol And Other Dependencies, based in the Ministry for the Family and Social Solidarity, collects data related to drugs on an annual basis. This is done in collaboration with the unit's information network made up of treatment agencies, health departments, the police, Customs, the courts, the probation services, the forensic laboratory, the Substance Abuse Therapy Unit (SATU) and the Corradino Correctional Facility (CCF). Ms Girard said chronic relapsers, who would have been abstinent for a while and then return to addiction, were among those at risk of overdose because of lower tolerance to the drug. She said there is also a high risk for those who are not daily users and who then take the same amount as someone who would be using the drug everyday. Those with increased social and health problems, particularly those who abuse any psychiatric medication, could also be at risk. "The reasons for the overdose could be various. Some victims could be people who are extra-confident about their level of tolerance to the substance, which happens especially if a person has not used the drug for a while. Another reason could be that the person changed the supplier, which would have affected the drug purity, or the victim mixed various substances or took alcohol and drugs together," a spokesman for Sedqa, the local agency against drug and alcohol abuse, said. She said the tendency was that overdose victims, regardless of their age, were mainly be heavy drug users. However, there have been reported cases of both fatal and non-fatal overdoses by people still in the experimental stage of substance abuse. The spokesman said that if a person was abusing drugs and something went wrong, the risk of overdose increased if s/he was on his/her own and not in a group because there would not be anyone around to help. A paper just published by the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) said drug overdose is a major cause of deaths among young people in Europe, with more than 8,000 fatalities recorded in the continent every year. The centre said evidence shows that a broad range of measures can be effective in reducing drug overdose and added that overdose prevention measures, including educational and strategic measures that can reduce mortality and morbidity, were generally becoming more common. Asked about the prevention scenario in Malta, Ms Girard said substance dependent people who were in contact with treatment services - given by Caritas, Oasi and Sedqa, and also the probation services and SATU - were given information about the risks involved in injecting drugs, the combination of abusing any psychiatric medication together with illicit drug use and alcohol as well as the risks of overdosing associated with long term abstinence and relapse. Ms Girard said drug prevention programmes implemented in schools and in the community also included topics related to the health risks involved in taking drugs. In an effort to try and prevent drug-related deaths and overdose Malta Red Cross and St John's Ambulance personnel are present at parties where drugs may be consumed. The Sedqa outreach team even mount stands providing useful information at some parties. Additionally, the social affairs committee of the House of Representatives is debating the issue of the negative impact of the interpretation of the law as it stands at present in connection with those accompanying an overdose victim to hospital, who could be liable to charges of manslaughter in the unfortunate circumstances of death. "The best way to reduce the risk of overdosing is total abstinence," the Sedqa spokesman said. She said agencies promote harm minimisation practices to reduce the risks connected with substance abuse, including the spread of blood-borne diseases like Hepatitis and HIV. "Harm minimisation measures and information are passed on to every new client coming in contact with the agency's services, individually and regularly," she said, adding that other clients using the services were constantly reminded about the dangers related to drug abuse. "There is a constant flow of information passed to Seqda's existing clients, possible future clients, people at risk of abusing substances and the general public. This is given both through the agency's prevention programmes and through its care services." The first home for homeless drug users was opened in Malta by Caritas last October. Programme coordinator Mariella Balzan explained that homeless drug users are among those mostly at high risk of overdose. She said the shelter is also open to drug users who leave prison without a plan on how to continue taking the medication which they would have been taking while doing time. At the moment there are eight males at the shelter. Ms Balzan said another programme which attempts to reduce the incidence of overdoses offers a place to go to those drug users who are not able to stop taking drugs and do not work. Gozo is mainly dealt with by the Oasi Foundation. Noel Xerri, from the foundation, said "an enormous amount of prevention" work is done through the Oasi primary prevention team, which has been working with Gozitan students for the past 13 years. The foundation also offers the assistance of a counsellor. "This crisis intervention service handles about 200 people annually," he said. Mr Xerri said that although prevention is always better than cure there are still some people who abuse drugs and the foundation offers its services to reach out and be effective in a therapeutic way towards the victims and their families. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)