Pubdate: Thu, 03 Dec 2015 Source: Baltimore Sun (MD) Copyright: 2015 The Baltimore Sun Company Contact: http://www.baltimoresun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37 MARYLAND'S ADDICTION PROBLEM Hogan Needs to Make a Substantial Commitment to Reducing Overdoses Atask force appointed by Gov. Larry Hogan to look into how Maryland can reduce the number of heroin overdose deaths released a wide-ranging series of recommendations Tuesday that included both expanded access to treatment for addicts and tougher law enforcement measures against drug dealers and gangs. The 11 members of the panel, chaired by Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford, acknowledged that there are no quick or easy solutions to overdose deaths and that a coordinated, multifaceted approach is needed to address them. But their final report offered few specifics regarding how large an effort will be needed to make a dent in the problem or how much it would cost. Those are both urgent questions, given that heroin overdose deaths in the state have reached epidemic proportions. Over the last five years the number of such cases has nearly doubled. This year alone some 340 people have died of heroin overdoses, compared to 293 during the same time period in 2014. The spike in fatal overdoses appears to be driven by people who formerly were addicted to prescription painkillers but turned to street drugs like heroin when stricter monitoring of pharmacies and hospital dispensaries made those legal medications harder to get. Since the heroin they purchase illegally frequently is mixed with other chemicals such as fentanyl - a synthetic opioid 30 to 50 times more powerful than unadulterated heroin - users can easily suffer a fatal overdose before they even realize what is happening. Earlier this year a Baltimore City task force announced a more than $20 million plan to cut overdose deaths in the city. It included providing around-the-clock treatment options for addicts, training the families of addicts to use the heroin overdose antidote Narcan and launching a public health information and education campaign to alert people to the dangers of overdose. Taken together the recommendations of the Hogan task force echo many of the city panel's proposals, but the new report doesn't put a specific price tag on the effort, and the governor's office stresses that Mr. Hogan will make the final decision regarding which recommendations, if any, he ultimately chooses to implement. In August, when the governor's task force last issued a preliminary report, Lieutenant Governor Rutherford suggested that regardless of what the state decided to do there probably would never be enough money to fully address Maryland's heroin overdose problem. Of the 10 recommendations his panel released at the time, the most substantial steps involved the allocation of $800,000 from this year's budget to a residential treatment facility in Kent County and $300,000 to Baltimore City for a pilot program to hire recovering addicts as outreach workers to help get current users into treatment. Other funds were directed through the Office of Crime Control and Prevention to help police agencies to address the heroin problem. But these were clearly stopgap measures rather than a comprehensive effort to address addiction statewide, and the time is coming for the governor to put a price tag on his commitment to the issue. Mr. Rutherford is right that the size of Maryland's heroin problem is daunting. But as Baltimore City Health Commissioner Lena Wen has pointed out, there are also research-based solutions to combating overdose deaths, and state officials need to find ways to support them. That's why we hope the governor will take the commission's recommendations as a springboard for a truly substantial investment. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom