Pubdate: Sat, 18 Jul 2015 Source: Orange County Register, The (CA) Copyright: 2015 The Orange County Register Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/321 Author: Jenna Chandler LIPSTICK AND HEROIN Seeking a cheaper, better high than they'd get from prescription pills, more women are using heroin in Orange County, mirroring a national trend recently reported by federal health officials. Though women accounted for fewer than half of the 466 heroin poisonings last year in Orange County, they are beginning to catch up to men. The number of women hospitalized with heroin poisoning from 2010 to 2014 increased 2.5 times, to 119 from 48, while it doubled for men in that same period, according to county data provided by the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. Across the country, the annual average rate of heroin use soared 100 percent for women and 50 percent for men from 2002-04 and 2011-13, the two three-year periods studied. It also shot up among all income groups -- 60 percent for households with yearly incomes above $50,000, according to a new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report. The figures are not surprising to local health officials and addiction specialists such as Jim O'Connell, who said they've been "screaming" about the problem for several years. They have noticed a leap in the number of people seeking treatment and fatally overdosing, and a shift in how heroin -- and who uses it -- is perceived. "The percentage of adolescents with heroin addiction, it's shocking," said O'Connell, chief executive of Social Model Recovery Systems Inc., which has treatment programs in Orange and Los Angeles counties. "Twenty years ago, we almost never saw a kid addicted to heroin. That is absolutely not the case today." The problem has grown to the point that Orange County sheriff's deputies, who often are the first to respond, soon will carry the antidote naloxone to revive people who have overdosed on opioids. Last summer, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder urged law enforcement agencies to equip officers with the antidote, saying he was confident it "has the potential to save the lives, families, and futures of countless people." The county also is spending more money to help addicts of heroin and other drugs get treatment, allotting an additional $1.7 million over the next two years to rent more beds at detoxification and rehab centers. Blame for the heroin boom is placed on a corresponding boom in the use of painkillers, often prescribed by doctors and promoted by the pharmaceutical industry. In 2012, health care providers in the U.S. wrote 259 million prescriptions for painkillers, enough for every adult to have one bottle of pills, according to the CDC. Women are more likely than men to be prescribed opioids. It's also harder for them to quit addictive substances, including heroin, and they are more susceptible to relapse, according to Harvard Health Publications. Adults and children are so comfortable with prescription opioids, they have become blase about heroin too, experts say. It's no longer perceived as a "hard" drug, and teens talk as casually about it as they do marijuana. It has even been given pot's old street name, "dope." In most cases, experts say, heroin has become a fallback for opiate addicts who can no longer afford, or find, prescriptions. It offers a similar, and sometimes more euphoric, high at a cheaper price. It can cost up to $100 a day to stay high on pills, while a balloon of heroin offering an eight-hour high is about $35, said Mike Darnold, who runs interventions with families and a 24/7 hotline for students at Dana Hills High School in Dana Point. Several years ago, treatment specialists and law enforcement officials realized that the new face of heroin use in Orange County was a well-off white male living in the hills or along the beach. That was a shift from 20 years ago, when a heroin user was more likely to be from a lower-income neighborhood. With more data to show heroin is finding a home in the suburbs nationwide, some in Orange County are hopeful that more might be done to try to change the culture around heroin, similar to the anti-tobacco campaigns of the 1990s. "We need a concerted, committed societal effort to make the use of recreational psychoactive substances uncool," O'Connell said. Darnold agrees, saying combating opioids cannot be done in emergency rooms or rehab. "The only way to change or reduce this epidemic is to change the culture," he said. Grass-roots efforts are underway to raise awareness about the prevalence of prescription drugs and the swell of heroin use in Orange County. But community forums, presentations and workshops, documentary screenings and classroom education are barely chipping away at the problem -- the number of opioid overdose deaths is going up, not down. Opioid overdoses caused the deaths of 263 people in Orange County last year -- 90 of them a result of injecting morphine or heroin. In 2013, 246 people died of opioid overdoses, including 59 who had injected morphine or heroin, according to data provided by the coroner. From 2011 to 2013 in Orange County, 70 percent of all overdose deaths investigated by the coroner involved opioids. Of those, more than half were caused by prescription drugs, 17 percent by heroin, and the remainder by some combination of the two and/or alcohol, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency. Darnold agrees there needs to be a culture change. He said that although he has managed to do that at Dana Hills, not enough is being done elsewhere in the county. "Our substance abuse incidents are way down," he said. "Our kids still smoke dope and do drugs. Just not at school." In Dana Point, where Darnold works, more residents die per capita overdosing on drugs and alcohol than in any other city in the county: nearly 34 of every 100,000 residents, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency. The 2012 death of 18-year-old Huntington Beach High School senior and varsity lacrosse player Tyler Macleod from a heroin overdose put the spotlight on Huntington Beach. About 80 residents demanded the City Council tackle the problem, which they said had largely been ignored. A Huntington Beach police unit made up of six undercover officers is working to dismantle distribution networks. In August, an officer will start work full time with a countywide narcotics task force. Police also have collected thousands of pills dropped off voluntarily for destruction, said chief Robert Handy. Officers responding to overdoses no longer treat the cases as strictly medical. They now try to find the source of the heroin, he said. But, Handy said, he fears "the problem will become worse," because of Proposition 47, which downgraded the possession of heroin for personal use to a misdemeanor. There's little incentive for people to seek treatment because they're no longer facing serious consequences, he said. "Treatment and prevention are the answer, not just arrest and enforcement, but that's a critical component," Handy said. "There have to be consequences, and people need incentives to get into treatment." When it comes to prevention, Mitch Cherness, with the Orange County Health Care Agency, said it's tough reaching people who are not already aware there's a problem, he said. "A lot of people who attend these forums are kind of aware already. The people that are not aware just stay unaware until it affects them personally," Cherness said. "A lot needs to be done, and change is slow." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom