Pubdate: Thu, 09 Jun 2005
Source: Swampscott Reporter (Marblehead, MA)
Copyright: 2005 Swampscott Reporter
Contact:  http://www2.townonline.com/swampscott/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3582
Author: Jonathan  Blodgett
Note: Mr. Blodgett is the district attorney of Essex County.
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)

MANDATORY REPORTING LAW IS ESSENTIAL

It is no secret that heroin and OxyContin abuse have reached epidemic 
proportions in Massachusetts. During the past year there have been 
numerous  forums in communities in Essex County to raise awareness of this 
terrifying and troubling problem which knows no geographic or 
socio-economic boundaries. Since  I began to discuss publicly the heroin 
and OxyContin epidemic, I have been  stopped in supermarkets, at basketball 
games and community events.

In these  brief, private moments, average citizens have shared 
heartbreaking stories of  young lives lost to addiction, of helpless 
parents searching for treatment beds  that don't exist, families being torn 
apart by the pressure that drug addiction  exerts, and of promising young 
lives lost too soon. While this  anecdotal evidence mounts, I, along with 
many others, have been searching for  answers.

What can we do to stem the tide? What can we do to reclaim our young people 
- - to treat those who have already fallen victim to the horror of 
opiate  addiction and to prevent others from going down that dead end road. 
As I have  met with community groups, concerned citizens, police officers, 
and national  drug enforcement specialists, several key answers have 
emerged: This is not a problem that law enforcement can solve alone.

As one police chief said, "We are not going to arrest ourselves out of this 
one." Treatment on demand is essential and simply does not exist in the 
Commonwealth today at the level required to meet this epidemic. Prevention, 
particularly through aggressive education efforts, is critical and requires 
committed people, funding, and information to succeed. The effects of this 
epidemic extend well beyond addicts and their friends and families.

Many police chiefs are reporting an increase in robberies, house and car 
break-ins, and other such crimes.

That trend will continue as the cost of these drugs increases and more 
addicts are forced to steal to support their  habit.

There is  one key component missing that is needed to direct the limited 
resources of our  law enforcement, substance abuse, and prevention 
agencies: DATA .. consistent  and comprehensive information of the number 
of opiate-related fatal and  non-fatal overdoses by community.

Without  hard, real-time numbers of opiate-related drug overdoses, we will 
end up  spending and wasting more money and time in our fight to stop this 
epidemic.  That is why House Bill 3128, mandating that hospitals report 
suspected overdoses  within 24 hours of treatment, is so essential to our 
efforts to combat opiate  abuse.

Currently,  law enforcement agencies learn about fatal and non-fatal 
overdoses in a  piecemeal, haphazard fashion usually months after they have 
occurred. Sometimes  we are notified by the Massachusetts Department of 
Public Health. Sometimes  local police or the medical examiner's office 
will inform us of overdoses. The  bottom line is that this information does 
not serve us as well as real-time, consistent, and comprehensive reporting 
required by this legislation would.

Patients  receiving treatment will have their anonymity protected. The 
information that is needed and which will be most useful is the number of 
fatal  and non-fatal opiate related overdoses occurring in each community. 
With that  information law enforcement could allocate its limited resources 
to areas that  are experiencing high overdose numbers in order to get the 
drug traffickers off  the streets.

For example, over the holidays there were two overdoses in a  seaside North 
Shore community in a short period of time. Had my office been aware of 
that, the Drug Task Force could have aided the police in that community  in 
investigating drug activity there in an effort to find and arrest the  dealers.

As it happened, we found out in March, much too late to do anything 
significant.

Another  issue that is stifling our efforts to combat this problem is 
denial. Denial is a  barrier to finding solutions.

There are communities that still do not want to  acknowledge that heroin 
and OxyContin abuse have crossed their borders. I can  tell you that every 
one of the 34 cities and towns in Essex County has had at least one 
opiate-related incident occur in the last year. There is still a  strong 
inclination among some communities to refuse to acknowledge it, or 
simply  not to believe it. I believe that this denial will wither in the 
face of the  real-time numbers required by this bill. Finally,  and perhaps 
most importantly - until we can document accurately the number of  lives 
lost to these drugs, we will not succeed in securing adequate funds 
from  our state and federal government for treatment and prevention 
programs.  Certainly, as any district attorney will say - without 
sufficient evidence, the  case is lost.

We cannot  afford to lose this fight.

Already we have lost too many people. Already, drugs  have ruined too many 
lives and families.

Those who share their stories with me  are on the front lines of a 
community and regional war; they are brave people,  who in some cases have 
allowed the media to put a public face on the problem of  heroin and 
OxyContin addiction. Until and  unless we have a consistent and 
comprehensive data stream which will tell the  true story of the havoc 
wreaked by heroin and OxyContin in this state, this  epidemic will continue 
to take lives.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager