Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jan 2015 Source: Chillicothe Gazette (OH) Copyright: 2015 Chillicothe Gazette Contact: http://www.chillicothegazette.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.chillicothegazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2749 Author: Caitlin Turner OVERDOSE DEATHS SPIKE TO NEW HIGH IN ROSS COUNTY CHILLICOTHE - For most parents, their worst nightmare is burying their child. Marshall Frankel lives that nightmare daily. Frankel lost his daughter, Michelle Frankel, and his son, Benjamin Frankel, within months last year to overdoses involving heroin, with Michelle passing away in April and Benjamin in June. "Even though it is happening, there's nothing you can do," Frankel said. "The biggest problem is that it is all over the U.S., not just Chillicothe." Michelle, 26, and Benjamin, 32, join the list of 27 other people whom Ross County lost to drug overdoses in 2014. Of the overdoses, 19 involved heroin - an increase almost five times that of 2013, when 22 people died of overdoses and four involved heroin. "Drug addiction isn't Darwinian," said Dr. John Gabis, Ross County coroner. "This isn't survival of the fittest. This is a disease." Gabis' concerns are echoed by law enforcement. The steady growth of those dying from overdoses has dispatch taking about three possible overdose calls per week, Chillicothe police Capt. Keith Washburn said. "Used to be you could take the map of Chillicothe and say, 'Where are the drug problems?' " Washburn said. "You could take a Sharpie with a fine point and point out the spots. If you took a map today and said, 'Where's the drug problem?' you could take a can of paint and sling it on the map; that would be your drug problem. It's everywhere. There's no geographical boundaries; there's no socioeconomic boundaries." The problem throughout the county is similar. Lt. Mike Preston, of the Ross County Sheriff's Office, said addiction knows no bounds and that the department has to do more to decrease the trend. The progression to heroin as the drug of choice grew out of addiction to prescription opioids, Chillicothe police Capt. Larry Bamfield said. "When I hired on in 1991, heroin had been pretty big in the '80s," Bamfield said. "In the '90s, we didn't see it. It was cocaine and crack all through the '90s, with some pills. Really, just in the last eight or nine years, it has come back. I think prescription pills based on Oxycontin with opiates, that's what has brought heroin back." Frankel said Michelle became addicted to prescription pain pills after a car accident three years before her death. Frankel said he believes she started using heroin the year she died. Before her death, Frankel said, Michelle graduated from vocational school and became certified in cosmetology. She was a mother to three children. Frankel's son, Benjamin, was a father to two. Frankel said his son was not an addict but had been going through a divorce near his death and "just let his guard down." Benjamin died June 29, 2014 - 62 days after Michelle's death April 28. "He was the best dad you've ever seen," Frankel said. "He was unreal. . I talked to him shortly before he died, and I told him he didn't sound too good." What is being done To fight the flow of drugs coming in from the major highways surrounding and running through Ross County, the sheriff's office, city police and the Ohio Highway Patrol have teamed up to help each other coordinate enforcement. "It's like weeds, these drug houses," Washburn said. "This one springs up, you fix it. Another springs up, you fix that. We are keeping the garden presentable, but we've got a lot of weeds." On the judicial side, Ross County Common Pleas Judge Michael Ater presides over the drug court, which was created as a court-supervised, treatment-focused diversion program for specific types of drug offenders. The court allows offenders to plead guilty to offenses but have findings of guilt delayed for a year while they go through the court's program. Successful completion could result in cases being dismissed at the end of the year. Jail inmates are kept free of drugs, Preston said, in preparation for an opportunity to go before the drug court. Sheriff George Lavender said $400,000 of his department's budget is used on medical costs for inmates in jail each year, with many related to complications brought forth from drug use. Lifesaving drugs When the city fire department arrives at a drug overdose scene, time is of the essence. The drug of choice in bringing someone back from an overdose is naloxone, marketed under the label Narcan. Narcan can be administered either through an IV, a syringe or nasal spray and works to counter the effects of opioids. "Usually, they come out pretty quick," Chillicothe fire Chief Jeffrey Creed said about overdose victims. "Sometimes they come out slow; sometimes they come out fighting." During 2014, the city fire department administered 118 doses of Narcan. The number is almost twice that of 2013, when 68 doses were needed. However, the fire department's numbers fall short of Adena Medical Center's emergency department, which administered 115 doses in 2013, 210 in 2014 and 15 in the roughly three weeks since 2015 began. Creed said some of the doses were used on calls of an unresponsive person, and emergency medical technicians and medics use Narcan in case the person is unresponsive because of an overdose. Area township fire departments also carry the medication. "The first time that I'd seen Narcan used, we had to force entry into a house around midnight," Washburn said. "This guy was dead, and they tried to find a vein on him and they couldn't find a vein. So they hit him intermuscular, and they brought him back. ... One of the things about it is, you think this person has scraped up enough money to get that last high, that's all they live for. Their body has to have it, and you're taking that away from them." The Ross County Health District offers Narcan training to anyone interested through Project DAWN. The training takes five to 10 minutes, said Kathy Wakefield, director of nursing and communication health services. "We give each person trained two doses of Narcan," Wakefield said. "We don't have that many people coming in for the kit, unfortunately. Mostly, it is friends and family of someone who has an opioid addiction." Since the training program began in February 2014, Wakefield said, the department has given out 60 kits. There are 200 kits available, and more can be ordered upon request. When it comes to recovery, the health district offers its Vivitrol program. Wakefield said Vivitrol is a non-narcotic medication taken every 28 days that blocks the high from heroin or other opioids from reaching the brain. Two-thirds of the patients come to the program through the drug court. The program began in March 2014 and has 40 patients who receive the monthly shot. Wakefield said patients are recommended to get the shots for one year and must take part in counseling throughout the process. "The patient must be free of opioids or heroin for 10 days before stopping treatment or it will throw you into withdrawal," Wakefield said. "We require the counseling because, if the person does not change their environment, they are not as successful. Just the Vivitrol isn't enough." The Ross County Jail can help inmates become drug-free before going in front of the drug court and then being eligible to receive Vivitrol. Looking forward Ross County is being considered as the pilot county for the state's Heroin Partnership Program, which could provide state funding and expertise to better track, treat and curve opioid addiction downward. While the county proceeds with the application process, law enforcement continues to work with the U.S. 23 Pipeline Task Force to share resources such as undercover officers and investigators between Ross, Highland, Pickaway, Pike and Fayette counties, Preston said. Preston said doctors and law enforcement have made efforts to monitor prescription pill use and the laws surrounding prescribing because they can spawn opioid addiction, which can lead to heroin addiction because it is cheaper than prescription medication. "It used to be that heroin was a drug you worked up to," Preston said. "Now, it's a drug people start with." Efforts continue to be made by law enforcement, the court system and treatment centers to collaborate on getting treatment to addicts faster. "We cannot arrest away the drug problem," Washburn said. "That is not the answer. Law enforcement's role should be somewhat of a deterrent. You need a collaboration of treatment, support agencies, family. This whole community, everything has to come together to get rid of this." The problem, Kathy Wakefield said, is a generational one. "We have a whole generation who is growing up raised by their grandparents because they lost their parents to drug problems," Wakefield said. Frankel is among the grandparents raising their grandchildren. He said he has guardianship over Michelle's three children. "It's awful for any parent to think that it's the police's job to keep our kids clean," Frankel said. "The morning she died, Michelle called me at 7 a.m. and asked for money. I said, 'Honey no, I don't have any money.' I know she'd never call me at 7 a.m. because she was hungry. The drugs are more powerful than me or anyone can realize." Drug deaths in Ross County 2005: 12 2006: 11 2007: 20 2008: 10 2009: 18 2010: 19 (3) heroin 2011:21 (5) heroin 2012: 18 (9) heroin 2013: 22 (4) heroin 2014: 29 (19) heroin Note: Heroin numbers could be provided only since 2010 and are included in each year's total number of deaths. Source: Ross County Coroner's Office Naloxone, an anti-overdose drug, administered by the Chillicothe Fire Department: 2012: 73 2013: 68 2014: 118 Note: Numbers represent doses administered by emergency medical technicians and paramedics only. Source: Chillicothe Fire Department Naloxone Usage in Adena Medical Center Emergency Room 2012: 193 doses 2013: 115 doses 2014: 210 doses 2015 so far: 15 doses Project DAWN and Vivitrol Program Project DAWN is a program dedicated to training addicts, their friends and family members on how to administer naloxone. The Vivitrol program offers a drug that addicts can have injected into muscle once a month, and it blocks the areas of the brain that react to drugs, making it impossible get the feeling of being high. Both programs are run out of the Ross County Health District. Project DAWN (number of those trained and carrying naloxone since it began in Feb. 2014): 60 kits given with 2 doses/kit Vivitrol program (number of patients since it began in March 2014): 40 patients currently on the monthly injection - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom