Pubdate: Tue, 23 May 2006 Source: Detroit News (MI) Copyright: 2006, The Detroit News Contact: http://detnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/126 Author: Kim Kozlowski, The Detroit News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) DELAYED DRUG ALERT DEADLY? Federal drug officials issued a public warning in November that heroin purchased by undercover law enforcement agents in Detroit contained a lethal amount of the painkiller fentanyl -- but it took Wayne County officials six months to alert the public. "At the time, it wasn't clear it was a public health threat," Wayne County Medical Examiner Carl Schmidt said. Since then, more than 70 Metro Detroit heroin users have died from an overdose with fentanyl in their blood, and 19 more people are suspected to have died similarly late last week. Chicago, Philadelphia and other cities are experiencing similar problems, but Wayne County is believed to be the community where the most heroin users in the nation have died with fentanyl in their blood. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sent two officials to Wayne County on Monday for five days to review the deaths from this year, 70 so far, and last year, which totaled 63. Typically, Wayne County sees 20-25 fentanyl-associated deaths annually and those are usually people with cancer, who take their own lives because they can't bear the pain, Schmidt said. The trend of more heroin users dying with fentanyl in their blood wasn't clear because often those who die have several drugs in their system, Schmidt said. What's more, the total number of heroin users stayed the same: Every year since 2000, about 220 people die from heroin use in Wayne County. Though fentanyl-associated deaths in Wayne County increased from an average of two dozen people annually to 63 people last year, the total number of people who died from heroin stayed the same. Detroit averages 2-3 people who die from a drug overdose daily. But last week, four people died on Thursday, eight on Friday, two on Saturday and five on Sunday. Officials alerted the public Friday. Valerie Wynns, who knew a 27-year-old Lincoln Park man who died in March of a drug overdose with fentanyl in his blood, said it was tragic that it took so long to figure out. "They did not connect the dots," Wynns said. "We are in the computer era. Why can't the government be linked so that people don't die in the interim?" - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman