Pubdate: Mon, 07 Sep 2015 Source: Honolulu Star-Advertiser (HI) Copyright: 2015 Associated Press Contact: http://www.staradvertiser.com/info/Star-Advertiser_Letter_to_the_Editor.html Website: http://www.staradvertiser.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5154 Author: Dan Sewell, Associated Press PARENTS WIN PRAISE AFTER TYING DEATH OF DAUGHTER WITH HEROIN MIDDLETOWN, OHIO (AP) - Confronted with the sudden death of their 18-year-old daughter, Fred and Dorothy McIntosh Shuemake recently made a defiant decision: They would not worry about any finger-pointing, whispers or family stigma. They directed the funeral home to begin Alison Shuemake's obituary by stating flatly that she died "of a heroin overdose." They aren't the first grieving American parents to cite heroin in an obituary as such deaths nearly quadrupled nationally over a decade, but it's rare, even in a southwestern Ohio community headed toward another record year in heroin-related deaths. "There was no hesitation," Dorothy McIntosh Shuemake said. "We've seen other deaths when it's heroin, and the families don't talk about it because they're ashamed or they feel guilty. Shame doesn't matter right now." "What really matters is keeping some other person, especially a child, from trying this. ... We didn't want anybody else to feel the same agony and wretchedness that we're left with," she said. She and her husband, a retired Middletown police detective who investigated crimes against children, want to promote a potentially preventive dialogue about what the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls an epidemic. In Butler County, where the Shuemakes live, the coroner's statistics show heroin-related deaths jumped in two years from 30 to 103 in 2014, with 86 recorded already through the first six months of this year. Their decision has drawn a wide outpouring of support, both locally and on social media, with online comments and emails from around the world. Scott Gehring, who heads the Sojourner Recovery Services addiction treatment nonprofit in Butler County, praised the Shuemakes' "strength and foresight" to draw attention to heroin's role. A search of "heroin" on the Legacy.com site with obituaries from more than 1,500 newspapers found only a handful in the last month. One was from the Ventura County Star in California, describing Cameron Kean Crawford's talent in art and technology and his placid demeanor until "heroin unraveled his life, causing his shocking demise from an overdose on ... his 34th birthday." Alison Shuemake had recently got a job at a salon after being recruited by a manager who admired the way she did her hair and makeup. She and her boyfriend both had two jobs and moved into an apartment together a few weeks ago. Although she had been in rehabilitation months earlier for alcohol and marijuana abuse, she seemed happy, her parents said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom