Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jun 2006 Source: New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM) Copyright: 2006 The Santa Fe New Mexican Contact: http://www.freenewmexican.com/emailforms/letters.php Website: http://www.freenewmexican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/695 Author: Diana Heil Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) STUDY - OVERDOSE CLOAKS SUICIDE ATTEMPT Researcher Says Data Will Help Hospitals In the emergency departments of St. Vincent Regional Medical Center and Espanola Hospital, 47 percent of patients who overdosed on drugs did so with the intent of killing themselves. They tended to be women, ages 23 to 35, who combined multiple substances, such as over-the-counter drugs, alcohol, tranquilizers, muscle relaxants and antidepressants, to harm themselves, according to a 14-month state Department of Health study of those two hospitals. It's unknown how New Mexico's overdose suicide attempts compare with other emergency departments around the country because such studies aren't common. However, the fact that more females were treated for nonfatal intentional overdoses than men corresponds with national trends. "The only thing that I am finding surprising is the predominance of prescription drugs," said Health Department researcher Nina Shah. "I think it's important that that is addressed in terms of prevention .. and in finding the context for why this is happening." A great deal of attention for years has been focused on New Mexico's severe drug problem. Little has been known about people in the state who survive overdoses, however, so health authorities in 2003 decided to make it a condition that hospitals must track. Out of that came this pilot study of the two hospitals, located in Santa Fe and Rio Arriba counties, which for multiple years have been among the top 20 in the U.S. for rates of drug-overdose death. "The first step is just to measure and see what's going on," Shah said. "We have two years of data and it's very initial." In all, emergency departments in Santa Fe and Espanola reported 561 overdoses or poisoning cases -- 34 of them repeat patients -- between July 2004 and last August. Overdoses from alcohol only or poisons, such as household cleaning solutions, weren't counted. The study classified 35 percent as unintentional overdoses and 18 percent were of unknown intent. In general, the typical overdose patient was around age 33, Hispanic and living in a city. Men were slightly more represented than women. Roughly half of overdose patients required hospitalization. Three patients treated in 2004 subsequently died. The busiest seasons were summer and spring. Death records for the 2005 patients weren't available. Within a day or two of overdosing, patients often start using drugs again, other research has shown. That's why it's important for emergency departments to intervene. "In a locale where the drug-related burden is severe and long-standing, evidence-based and innovative strategies are warranted," Shah wrote. About 7 percent of patients in the study overdosed again. In fact, 13 patients had more than three -- and as many as eight -- overdoses during the period of the study. Repeat patients were more likely to be Hispanics who overdosed on such substances as heroin, methadone, tranquilizers and muscle relaxants, according to the study. "Part of the gist of this whole thing is for EDs to understand that they are an important window of opportunity," Shah said. "Coupled with the finding that drug users are more likely to seek care in the ED, I think these unique opportunities are important to capitalize on." Shah said emergency departments should consider making these interventions routine: ► Distribute customized overdose-prevention literature to patients prior to their release from the hospital. ► Initiate brief discussions with patients about their drug problems and their motivations for change. ►Refer patients to drug-treatment programs. "It's not happening across the board," Shah said, "and I don't think it has been made a priority in terms of what happens in an ED." However, the study did not gather information on how many patients got help in the emergency department for the underlying issues behind their overdoses. In future studies, Shah said, she will track whether patients received overdose-prevention materials and treatment referrals before leaving the emergency department. Knowing the characteristics of overdoses in a community will help guide those efforts. "In Espanola, it was largely young, Hispanic males overdosing on heroin," Shah said. Case managers there need to present treatment options and remind those who overdosed not to mix heroin with alcohol, she said. The trend was different for Santa Fe. "There's more prescription-drug overdose in Santa Fe, so there might be a little more focus on that," Shah said. Heroin and cocaine were common factors in unintentional overdoses, whereas prescription drugs were more common in overdose-suicide attempts, according to the study. Dr. Frantz Melio, who heads the emergency department at St. Vincent, said overdoses are taken seriously and treated on the spot. Crisis counselors, available 24 hours a day, talk with patients and refer them for drug treatment or psychiatric services, he said. "I would absolutely agree that you have to talk to these individuals soon after the event," Melio said. "We ... do that. Our services at St. Vincent are actually quite good." Although Santa Fe's emergency department has distributed literature about preventing opiate overdoses, it has no literature specific to prescription-drug overdoses, Melio said. Nothing about the findings surprised Melio, who notes that nonprescription drugs can be as lethal as prescription drugs -- and can cause lasting liver damage. Depressed people wanting to hurt themselves often reach for what's in the medicine cabinet. He observed another distinction between overdose patients: "Patients aren't doing cocaine and heroin to kill themselves. They're doing that to get high." The complicated aspect of the study was determining whether a patient made a suicide attempt or simply a suicide gesture. Shah said defining intent among drug users can be ambiguous. "I'm trying to figure out a way to describe it more as a spectrum of intent," she said. "It could be a true suicide. It could be a cry for help. It could be indifference to what happens. And it could be a true accident." With patients often using multiple substances, interactions between drugs can cause adverse reactions. Also, taking too much medication to speed up the effect is a classic problem with a drug like methadone -- a prescription drug used in the treatment of heroin addicts -- because it's slow-acting, Shah added. Espanola Hospital did not respond to multiple requests for comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman