Pubdate: Sun, 21 May 2006 Source: Carroll County Times (MD) Copyright: 2006 Carroll County Times Contact: http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1524 Author: Ari Natter, Times Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) COUNSELORS SAY THEY DON'T HAVE TIMELY DRUG-USE INFORMATION Substance-abuse counselors and others interested in tracking drug use have long considered a periodic report hospitals generate about drug use to be a valuable tool. Then last summer, substance-abuse counselors in the program's Baltimore region, which includes Carroll Hospital Center, noticed that the reports stopped coming in. "We are not getting up-to-date information," said Mark Yount, substance-abuse prevention coordinator for the drug treatment facility Junction Inc. "Trying to get up-to-date information is really hard these days, so we are kinda behind." Put out by the Drug Abuse Warning Network, and overseen by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services, the reports are useful for monitoring and tracking emerging drug trends. It helps those fighting drug abuse by keeping tabs on people who seek treatment in hospital emergency rooms for drug-related incidents such as overdoses. For instance, the reports could allow researchers to gauge the severity of possible methamphetamine abuse in the area, Yount said. "We are real nervous about this methamphetamine thing, but we don't know," he said. Teresa Fletcher, a spokeswoman for the Carroll Hospital Center, said the facility continues to compile information about drug-related admissions to its emergency department even though it is no longer required to do so by the state. But because it now has to be entered by hand, no information has been available from the state since July 2005. "It's a time-consuming, manual process, and that's why it takes a long time to really look at that data," she said. Administrators at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services say budget cuts led them to drop the Baltimore region and nine other metropolitan areas, mostly on the East Coast, from participation in the program. Judy Ball, project director for the Drug Abuse Warning Network, said a redesign of the program led to the realization that running the program would cost more money, but said they hope to reinstate the areas cut out of the program sometime in the future. "We really do hope that we will be able to go back into the cities," Ball said. "It's a matter of budget." Until then, drug-abuse researchers are struggling to find a new way to collect the data that had been available to them since 1972. Erin Artigiani, deputy director of policy for the University of Maryland's Center for Substance Abuse Research, said the organization has taken to getting information from drug-treatment facilities and interviewing juveniles being processed by the Department of Juvenile Services, but the information doesn't compare to that given by the DAWN reports. "That was a resource we used for many years. That was something we thought was really valuable," said Artigiani. "It seems like much of the northeastern United States isn't included anymore, and of course that's an important area of the United States when monitoring drug trends." Getting information directly from hospitals is difficult, because emergency room doctors find it a burden to monitor and track drug-abuse cases while concentrating on treatment, Artigiani said. "They don't want to take someone away from patient care to do it," she said. "But it's valuable data and certainly something I would love to have access to." [Sidebar] Tracking Heroin Heroin-related admissions to Carroll Hospital Center 1998: 131 1999: 121 2000: 88 2001: 70 2002: 100 2003: 151 2004: 143 Source: Carroll County State's Attorney's Office Heroin-related deaths in Carroll County 1998: 3 1999: 2 2000: 4 2001: 8 2002: 12 2003: 9 2004: 7 2005: 6 2006: 3 (so far this year) Source: Carroll County State's Attorney's Office - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman