Pubdate: Wed, 07 Nov 2007 Source: North Adams Transcript (MA) Copyright: 2005 New England Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.thetranscript.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3745 Author: Johnnie Carrier KICK THE BUREAUCRATS If you are a junkie, then you know the biggest problem with your pesky little habit is the rising quandary of overdosing. With heroin-related deaths having doubled since 1997, overdoses in Massachusetts are reaching epidemic proportions, due mainly to a few factors. The drug's purity and cheap price have made it as dangerous and as easy to get as a bottle of Mad Dog 20-20, with a less of a stigma attached to it as say a wino "getting on the dog." So what are you going to do, go clean, quit, head to rehab again? Relax. Don't get you tourniquet bunched up in a knot. John Auerbach, the commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, has announced a new program involving the drug Narcan. Narcan is designed to reverse the debilitating effects of an opiate overdose, and it's now available free at many of the department's Boston area offices. The state recognizes that some of you junkies are either cooking a little bit more then you should in an effort to reach that chemical Nirvana or you are getting some pretty good ... er, stuff... which shuts off that all-important central nervous system controlling the breathing and other faculties you're going to need when stealing that 21-inch color TV while jonesing for your next high. The DPH realizes that most of you are not ready for treatment, so instead of making you twitch, vomit and kick through boring testimonials from former junkies, it is going to give you the Massachusetts overdose kit. This life-saving packet contains not only a dose of Narcan that will be administered by being sprayed into your nose, you'll also get a Junkie Land's do's and don'ts magnetic checklist that can be stuck on that stolen college refrigerator you are trying to heist. You'll get simple reminders, like not hitting the spike alone. Mainly because your going to need what they call an "H buddy" to spray the Narcan up your lifeless snout while you are zoned out colder then a mackerel with the sounds of Santana doing "Black Magic Woman" in your ears. Like most experimental government programs, this one is flawed, so the state is asking for patience from all concerned. For example, in an effort to keep the initial costs at a minimum, the program will be open only to the first 450 junkies from the North Shore, Connecticut River Valley, Cape Cod and Southeast regions of the state, which means Berkshire County smackheads are bumming big time. By doing this, the state estimates the program will cost only $50,000. But more importantly, no state employee will have to drive the Turnpike for 2 1/2 hours to Berkshire County to train junkies to administer the Narcan first before rifling though the victim's pockets looking for the remaining amounts of dope or any money that could be used to score more smack. Also complicating life like an arm full of needle marks and a closet full of short-sleeve shirts is the fact that other victims of addiction are seeking additional funding to support their client list. Crack addicts want the state to restore their pride. Alcohol groups are seeking free adult diapers to be handed out to drunks refusing treatment, and potheads just want people to stop following them around. I know you're thinking that if you start saving junkies, won't that enable them not to stop and possibly lead to the creation of a superhuman -- a never-dying beast like Courtney Love, Edgar Winters or Keith Richards? Relax. Your thoughts are starting to fly inside around your head like someone who just shot up a baking soda on an old episode of "Dragnet." The old junkie is admittedly a rare sight, but he or she does not possess any super strength and is only a threat to small electronic devices like TV's, DVD players and what once was called the boom box. Will this junkie-saving initiative work? A report from Maryland, which has had the same plan in effect for a few years now, states that 194 OD's were reversed in its first year in Baltimore alone, while the heroin-related death rate fell by one third. "Far out," said Kurt Barry, head of the Heroin Chic Coalition for the Emaciated. Barry told the editor of the Burnt Spoon Times that, "I knew it would work! It was just a matter of getting people to stay awake long enough to administer the nose spray to save the person they shouldn't have been sharing needles with in the first place. These are heady days in Junkie Land." In theory, this program Mr. Auerbach has initiated, along with his staff at the DPH, can work as long as they have the support of us, Mr. and Mrs. America -- those everyday people who realize we can't save the world, but we can save a little corner of that drug-infested neighborhood we've been refusing to drive through for years now. Johnnie Carrier is a freelance writer who in his wildest imagination could never have dreamed of a day when the world would make him look sane. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek