Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jun 2006 Source: Berkshire Eagle, The (Pittsfield, MA) Copyright: 2006 New England Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.berkshireeagle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/897 Author: Benning W. De La Mater, Berkshire Eagle Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) YOUTH THE FIRST HOPE IN FIGHT AGAINST HEROIN, OTHER DRUGS The battles are waged on streets, in classrooms, and in political circles, hospitals and at the dinner table. The fight against heroin relies on a network of people: Police officers. Educators. Elected officials. Medical professionals. Moms and dads. The mission has multiple goals: reducing the amount of drugs coming into Berkshire County; changing the nonchalant attitudes about abuse; helping the one person who previously might have been unreachable; and eliminating the stigma that drugs only affect society's downtrodden. And most importantly, it's remembering that the fight isn't just about heroin and other opioids, including the prescription painkiller OxyContin. The battle starts with discussions about alcohol and focuses on getting young people to think about substance abuse as an unacceptable choice for the body. "If we really want to make a significant dent in drug use in our communities, we have to start with the young children," said Michael Botticelli, assistant commissioner for substance abuse services at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. "There's a culture in society that has sanctioned underage drinking and, in some instances, even drug use. We have to change community norms." That sentiment has been echoed locally of late, and it serves as the motto for the year-old Pittsfield Prevention Partnership (PPP), a group of local leaders and civilians determined to fight alcohol and drug abuse. The organization was formed in the model of a similar and successful group in North County, the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition. Berkshire County District Attorney David F. Capeless, a PPP member, said that in some homes, parents tolerate underage drinking. For instance, a mother allows her teenager to drink at a friend's house, condoning it because she knows her child won't be driving for the night. Or a father finds his son's marijuana cigarette, but brushes it off because he smoked pot at his child's age. "We call it the trickle-down effect," Capeless said. "The attitudes that we convey to our children will influence their actions. If we're going to take things lightly, so are they. When they're drunk, they're more likely to try marijuana. And if they've smoked marijuana, they're more likely to take an opioid pill." The PPP is trying to open the lines of communication between parents and drug counselors. Francesca Speicher-Cote, a counselor from Pittsfield, said parents need to get over the stigma that sending a child to counseling "looks bad." 'No parenting' "The results can be worse," she said. "I had a pair of 14-year-old girls say to me, 'Mrs. Cote, if you just tried opioids, you'd love them.' There was no parenting there." Cote said that even though the girls went through a Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program in middle school, they had little dialogue with their parents about drug abuse. Josh Weeks, the Pittsfield Public Schools' coordinator of health and physical education, said adolescents who talk about alcohol and drugs with their parents are less likely to abuse substances. He said organizations such as the PPP have been established because school districts have joined detox and rehab centers in absorbing reduced funding for drug and alcohol programs. Weeks said students take DARE classes in grade school and progress to more in-depth, science-based health programs. In addition to following state guidelines, Pittsfield schools augment the curriculum with the Michigan Model, "which places the emphasis on student skill-building," Weeks said. He said students are presented with real-life situations. In one scenario, they're asked what they would do if a friend offered them a pill. "It opens up good dialogue," Weeks said. "It all comes back to decision-making. It's the behavior. Kids are going to experiment. But we need to stop the addiction." No fear Frankie, 22, a recovering addict from North Adams who asked that his real name not be used, said he went through the DARE program, yet still got addicted to heroin and cocaine. He said there will always be a segment of society that will experiment with chemicals. "Some will get addicted," he said. "But some of my friends tried heroin a bunch of times and didn't become addicted. I think a lot of it has to do with your chemistry. I was never scared of trying things." A 2004 survey by the state Department of Public Health found that 16 percent of eighth-graders said heroin is easy to obtain. And the Partnership for a Drug-Free America estimates that 1.7 percent of teenagers have tried heroin. The South Berkshire Youth Coalition and the Great Barrington-based Railroad Street Youth Project (RSYP) are teaming with schools, counselors and police officers to help educate adults and teens about drug trends and effects. Dahlia Bousaid, executive director at RSYP, said her group combines with drug counselors and recovering addicts to offer substance-abuse forums for at-risk youths. The forums breed an environment for open conversations. "When they've spoken with individuals who have dealt with addiction, who are honest and open with them rather than preaching at them, Francesca Speicher-Cote, a drug counselor from Pittsfield, says parents need to be more involved in helping kids fight addiction. that's when we've seen the best results," she said. Positive relationships between Berkshire County students and police also are fostered to encourage students to speak freely with their school's resource officer or a school adjustment counselor about drugs, knowing there won't be negative consequences. As school officials talk with parents and children about drugs, the police are working to keep drugs out of the county. The Berkshire County Drug Task Force plays an important role in the fight. The task force is composed of local police officers who operate countywide investigations with the help of state police. Often, you can spot police cars in strategic positions around Exit 2 in Lee. They're waiting for the latest shipment of heroin to enter the county, tipped off by an informant that drugs were being bought by a Berkshire resident and brought home to any number of towns or cities in the county. "We don't have a lack of informants," said Sgt. Joseph McDyer, a state trooper who leads the task force. "Sometimes they're addicts who want to (bust) their dealer, or maybe they're a relative of an addict and they want to get the guy whose been feeding them drugs." McDyer has worked the drug scene for more than 24 years and said Great Barrington became one of the first hot spots for heroin in the county more than a decade ago. And in Pittsfield and North Adams, opioid-related hospitalizations doubled from 2000 to 2005, according to the Massachusetts Inpatient Hospital Discharge Database. McDyer blames Berkshire County's heroin problems on the proximity to heroin-saturated areas such as Holyoke and Springfield. Police said they don't see as many large-scale heroin dealers come into Berkshire County and set up shop like they do for crack. Rather, a number of "mid-level dealers" and users make daily trips to the middle of the state, making it more difficult for police to bust. Arrests in Pittsfield The Pittsfield police have made 30 heroin arrests this year. Statewide, federal charges increased from 340 in 2002 to 451 in 2005, and federal seizures of heroin in the state during that period jumped from 1.1 kilograms to 25 kilograms. "Our goal is to try and combat the drug dealing, and we lock up a lot of people," McDyer said. "You're not going to stop drug use completely, but let's stop our kids from trying it." Part of the blame for an increase in addiction is placed on the media, which some say breed a nonchalant attitude toward teenage drinking and marijuana use. Beer placards are pasted all over sporting events, movies promote marijuana use, and commercials for alcohol show drinkers attracting mates. And now television is inundated Josh Weeks, the Pittsfield Public Schools' coordinator of health and physical education, says DARE classes and health programs in schools are meant to encourage smart decisions by youngsters. with commercials pushing a pill for every ailment imaginable, breeding a "take a pill to make yourself better" type of attitude. The Drug Enforcement Administration estimates there are 3 million heroin users in the United States, with 1 million addicts. Those trying heroin for the first time rose from 314,000 in 2003 to 398,000 in 2004. More than 11 million people in the United States have used OxyContin, a prescription painkiller, for non-medical purposes. Purdue Pharma L.P., the manufacturer of OxyContin, runs Communities That Care, a prevention-planning process designed to help communities support the healthy development of youth by reducing problem behaviors, including the abuse of prescription drugs. The initiative has been established in more than 500 communities worldwide, and in 2004, two New England cities -- Calais, Maine, and Lynn, Mass. -- received grants to start the program. James Heins, a spokesman for Purdue Pharma, said his company's drug provides a legitimate remedy for those suffering debilitating pain. "There's a widespread perception that these drugs are highly addictive, but very little acknowledgment that when used under a physician, patients see an improvement in quality of life, in working, and living a normal life." Heins said the company is working on technology to make opioids less addictive by developing agents that, when crushed and snorted, produce "no euphoric effects or mildly unpleasant effects." Locally, a pain conference was held at Berkshire Medical Center in May 2005 to address opioid abuse, and hospital officials said they are changing the ways they deal with pain and the prescriptions used to combat it. "We need to address the pain without pills, and we are doing that," said Dr. Donald Scherling, head of the McGee Unit, a detox clinic at Berkshire Medical Center. "Opioids need to be the last measure." BMC has implemented a surveillance program to ensure that those who are at risk for addiction are not prescribed opioids such as OxyContin or Percocet, but rather non-addictive pain medications such as Darvocet. Different strategies Now, those who need the powerful drugs receive smaller amounts. Long-term prescriptions have been eliminated, and studies have shown that people who undergo short opioid treatments for pain face a minimal risk of addiction. "The DA's office is collaborating with Berkshire Health Systems to make sure we're not prescribing medicine to people who are inclined to abuse it, or sell it to others, to make sure (the pills) are used for the purpose that they were intended," Capeless said. Doctors describe the prevention of opioid addiction as "a continuum of care," from more frequent visits with patients, to testing for addiction before prescribing, to doctor intervention in the early signs of abuse. Prevention and intervention are the two words you hear most often. But changing the community's attitudes toward addiction is the ultimate goal of drug education. This was heard in 2001, when former Berkshire County District Attorney Gerard D. Downing blamed part of the lack of public awareness of the rising heroin problem on decades-old stereotypes. "The fear I have is that the public still tends to think of the heroin junkies with the needles in the back alleys, but the profile of the user has changed," Downing said then. "That profile is getting younger." Berkshire County Sheriff Carmen C. Massimiano Jr. said he's often approached on the street by parents asking for help. "It's filtering into groups where you normally wouldn't think it would be, the good kids from the good families," he said. "I was a chief probation officer in the 1970s, and I saw this thing peaking, and now it's back again. It's not just an urban thing." Lisa, the mother of a Lee heroin addict, said her son hid his addiction from her for more than two years. It wasn't until he was arrested in Springfield three years ago that his secret came out. "I realize there are parents who are going through what I went through, who never believed their child could be doing this," she said. "But they will. Kids are going to try drugs. I saw him go through withdrawals, crawling on the floor, vomiting, sweating, begging me to get him more heroin. "We need to get the parents aware that this is going on." In the 1970s, Capeless said, the typical heroin addict was a 30-something, blue-collar worker. Today, it's a white, middle-class 20-something. Of the 47 opioid-overdose deaths in Berkshire County since 2000, the majority were males and ranged in age from 20 to 51. All were white. A national survey taken by the United Way in 2003 and 2004 determined that alcohol and drug abuse among teenagers has damaged the quality of life in the city and has hurt the health care system, leading to an increase in crime and addiction. New survey coming A new countywide survey of 4,500 students is due out by the end of the summer, and all three county prevention groups -- the Pittsfield Prevention Partnership, the Southern Berkshire Youth Coalition, and the Railroad Street Youth Project -- will use it as a basis for strategy. The survey is intended to determine the frequency and causes of drug abuse, including the role that poverty and depression play. Jim Cieslar, president of Berkshire United Way and a PPP member, said he believes that, to lower addiction rates, a community-wide effort will need to take place. "We can prevent these things from happening. Look at what we've done with smoking cigarettes and how people view that today," he said. "Fewer kids than ever are smoking today. We want to do that same thing with drugs and alcohol. It's about advocacy and awareness, and getting the information out on what they do to a body." Capeless said people should prepare for the long fight. Talk with your children, he said. "We're not to the point of giving up; we're trying to fight it," Capeless said. "But we have to realize that the Berkshires have changed. Pittsfield has changed. It's not accurate to blame our problem on outside forces. These are the people of Pittsfield and North Adams and Sheffield and Lee, and everywhere else. Let's focus our attention on working to prevent a new generation of users. "Let's work on the ones who aren't thinking about it." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman