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 OVERDOSE DEATHS DEMAND OUR ATTENTION, ACTION What if 29 people died at a specific intersection or on a particular stretch of road in the span of one year in Ross County? What if 29 different people contracted the same, eventually fatal, illness in one neighborhood and a year later were dead? Even if that happened in a five-or 10-year period, that would be eye-opening. If either of those things occurred in Ross County -- or in any community across the country -- there would be significant outcry and calls for action to help find the cause and help keep people safe. But last year in Ross County, 29 people died in Ross County from drug overdoses -- including 19 from heroin overdoses, an increase of nearly five times the 2013 number. Those lives lost brings the five-year total of deaths from drugs in our community to a staggering 109. If that doesn't scare you into helping our friends and neighbors, it should. Many, however, will see those numbers and respond with shrugs and indifference. We understand the indifference. Drug addiction is a complex disease - -- one that takes more than mere willpower to break. Drugs change the mind and create a compulsive need for more drugs. Even for those who want to quit, the pull of the high can be too strong, making quitting extremely hard. The cycle of quitting and relapsing is frustratingly common. We can't afford to be indifferent anymore. We can't sit back idly and avoid the conversation. We can't afford to think that these deaths are happening to other people. We must view this as a true public health concern, not limited to the addicts and those around them. It's not solely a law enforcement issue anymore. Our leaders are at work to find solutions. Last week's meetings in Ross County were designed to present a strong case for making Ross County a pilot community for the Heroin Partnership Program. We urge our state's leaders to consider not only the need here, but the willingness of the community to lead the way in battling heroin and its deadly consequences, in making their decision on which of four communities gets the program funding. At its base, though, must be a desire by the community to get involved, whether that means reporting suspected drug dealers to law enforcement; helping to get an addict you know into treatment; or pushing elected officials for accountability on reducing the number of overdose deaths. We also need to support the families of addicts, many of them who suffer from the abuse and take on extra responsibility in the absence of the addict. Drug-related deaths are no longer a problem strictly confined to and faced by the addicts and their families. As their fellow citizens, as their neighbors and as their friends, it is our problem, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom