Pubdate: Sat, 12 Mar 2005 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2005 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Steve Cannizaro, St. Bernard/Plaquemines bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) DRUG-MIXING DEATHS CONTINUE IN PARISH Coroner 'Frustrated' At Ongoing Problem "Frustrated" is the word Coroner Bryan Bertucci uses to describe his feelings about the continuing high number of drug overdose deaths in St. Bernard Parish, most of which are from mixing prescription pills. Little has changed despite two years of publicity about the more than 100 overdose deaths the parish has had since 2001 and efforts by the Sheriff's Office to crack down on illegal pill distribution. Records for 2004 show there were 36 such overdose deaths, down one from the 37 in 2003. Of the latest number, 25 were men and 11 were women. There were an estimated 40 deaths in 2002. There's no estimate on the number of people who have overdosed in recent years but survived after being brought to hospitals, Bertucci said. And, in the past week alone, there have been at least five more overdose cases in St. Bernard, in which at least two people died, sheriff's officials said. For a parish of fewer than 70,000, the figures have been alarming to law enforcement officials and the coroner, not to mention relatives of victims. "You're running about the same" as in recent years, Bertucci said. "It's not decreasing." "I feel more frustrated than anything else by what is going on." People using prescriptions pills "can't say they don't know" the dangers of mixing prescription drugs after all the publicity and word of mouth about the number of deaths "and yet they continue to do it," Bertucci said. "It's sad." A few overdoses are from illegal drugs such as heroin or cocaine, but the majority of the cases result from mixing prescription drugs including methadone, Xanbar, Vicodin, the muscle-relaxer Soma and, sometimes, alcohol, the coroner said. Bertucci said some deaths are suicides, but most appear to be from overdoses caused by "recreational use of prescription pills." Methadone continues to be the biggest underlying cause of the problem, he said. Sheriff Jack Stephens said in 2003 that the methadone problem was "out of control" in the parish. Stephens, whose department has made numerous arrests for "doctor-shopping," in which people go to different doctors and try to get the same prescriptions, said this week he considers prescription drug deaths an epidemic and the battle to prevent further deaths as a form of war. He said his department is committed to trying to reduce doctor-shopping because he believes that has been a source of many pills on the street. Stephens and Bertucci this week praised the St. Bernard Parish Council for considering zoning law changes that would make it more difficult for new pain-management clinics to locate in the parish because, they said, such clinics can prescribe or dispense prescription pain pills that can be abused. The zoning changes will be considered at a council meeting next week. Funeral home officials in Chalmette said two years ago they were shocked by the high numbers of funerals for young people because of drug overdoses. But the latest statistics, Bertucci said, continue a surprising trend he saw last year: many of those dying of overdoses in the past year were older people, in the 40- to 50-year-old range. The youngest victim was 15, while three victims were 57, he said. Bertucci also said many of those who died were unemployed or on disability and, based on discussions with family members, he said some suffered from lack of self-esteem, lack of goals, no self-discipline or no concept of delayed gratification. Some pill users develop a tolerance and take more and more to reach the same effect they had in the past, Bertucci said. "There is a fine line between being high and dying," he said. A statewide computerized system for pharmacies to check on a patient's recent prescription history would be helpful, he said, but that hasn't been mandated. Col. Forrest Bethay, a top-ranking officer in the Sheriff's Office who oversees narcotics, special investigations and detectives, said, "We'd like to get the message out that the mixing of these drugs is what's causing people to overdose. The drugs aren't made to be mixed." It seems to be a hard message to get into people's minds because "they don't think (dying) is going to happen to them," Bethay said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager