Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jun 2006 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Contact: 2006 Detroit Free Press Website: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Author: Rochelle Riley, Free Press Columnist Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) DO CARE ABOUT DRUG DEATHS It sounds like a Watergate-era question, but it fits: What did they know and when did they know it? Last August, the Wayne County Medical Examiner's Office began seeing more drug-related deaths involving a mix of the prescription drug fentanyl and heroin or cocaine. In November, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency announced how easily its undercover officers were able to buy the lethal mix in areas that included Wayne County. By December, 63 of the 457 drug-related deaths the Wayne County coroner handled had been caused by fentanyl-laced heroin or cocaine, an increase of 34 such deaths over the previous year. But county officials didn't issue a health alert until May 19 of this year, after 12 people had died in two days. Now, the county is in full crisis. I can't help but wonder: Should an alarm have been sounded sooner? Would it have been if the drugs were killing someone besides those people we refuse to look at on the street, or walk by outside the pharmacy or whisper about at work? An Uncaring World? I don't want to beat up county officials, who've had to endure phone calls from taxpayers asking why they're wasting so much money looking for something that is killing junkies. I want us all to look at ourselves and answer these questions: Is this what we've come to? Is this where we are in the world, in Michigan, in Wayne County? Since our coroner handles more than 400 drug-related deaths a year, have not only authorities but John and Jane Q. Public become too complacent about what we consider inconsequential deaths? Did any authorities react quickly enough? "We don't issue health alerts every day about people needing to not take cocaine or heroin. We don't," said county spokeswoman Teresa Blossom. She's right, of course. Addicts who try anything risk everything. But when is a crisis a crisis? If you're a county medical examiner, and 17 people die in one month from a new brand of street drug (as they did last November), do you alert the Centers for Disease Control, the public? Do you use the Emergency Broadcast System to warn dealers, many of whom live quite well? Or do you quietly work with police and small community groups to tell "those people" to be more careful? Fatalities Up on Weekends Drug deaths always increase on weekends. As we enter the Memorial Day holiday, expectations are that the lethal mix of pleasure and death that some dealers are marketing as "The New Heroin" and "Drop Dead" will send more people to the morgue, where Deputy Wayne County Medical Examiner Cheryl Loewe will be waiting for them. "The strike's against us for this weekend," said Loewe, who called the drug crisis the worse she has seen in her 12-year-tenure. "Whenever we have a warm-up in the temperatures, we always see a lot of fatalities. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake