Pubdate: Sun, 24 Apr 2016 Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Copyright: 2016 Media General Communications Holdings, LLC. Contact: http://www.timesdispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/365 Authors: John Ramsey and K. Burnell Evans OPIATE DEATHS KEPT INCREASING IN VA. IN 2015 Toll Tied to 40% Spike in Heroin Overdoses Michael Carter felt a brief flash of relief before searing grief consumed him. His son's life had ended, but so, too, had the nights spent wondering when police would show up at his Hanover County home to tell him Graham had fatally overdosed. A year later, Carter is left with the pain, and a question: How many more sons and daughters will die as state and federal officials pledge progress on stemming the tide of epidemic heroin and prescription pill abuse? There's no end in sight. Fueled by a 40 percent spike in heroin overdoses, the Virginia death toll from opiates continued to rise in 2015, according to newly released state data. The drugs now kill more people in Virginia than car crashes or guns. And, with every death, family members like Carter and his wife, Alison, grapple with grief, guilt and a million "what-ifs." "I can't help but wonder whether it hurt him or helped him to have us to fall back on," she said. Every false start along their son's winding road to recovery brought fresh heartache - and every relapse, paralyzing anxiety. "The worry ate away at us, but I always felt that Graham could make it," he said. Graham Carter had a chance. He graduated from Patrick Henry High School in 2004 and attended Reynolds Community College, Hampden- Sydney College and Randolph- Macon College. One professor told Graham's parents that he was among the best students in class - when he decided to show up. He had the support of his family and three stints of rehab under his belt. He was even mentoring others who wanted to stay clean. The 28- year-old with a quick wit and bright grin that would tighten into a smirk when he had been using drugs died alone in a house full of his friends on Carter Street in Richmond. They found his body in the bathroom a year ago last week. He recently had completed a long- term recovery program at The Healing Place in South Richmond. "I can't help wondering whether they took time, you know, to clean up after they found him," his mother said. "How long was he in there? Would it have made a difference? I guess it doesn't matter now." Last April, he was one of nine people who had died in Richmond of a heroin overdose during the first few months of 2015. Thus far in 2016, there have been 18. The number of nonlethal overdoses yearover-year has risen 350 percent, from 22 to 99, according to Richmond police data. The local trend mirrors newly released statewide figures that show opiaterelated overdoses continued to climb through the end of last year. Those numbers mark the first full year of statistics compiled since Gov. Terry McAuliffe in September 2014 created a new task force charged with taking "immediate steps to address a growing and dangerous epidemic of prescription opioid and heroin abuse in the commonwealth." Other state leaders, from Attorney General Mark R. Herring to local commonwealth's attorneys and police, have been trying to change the way addiction is treated, with a focus on treatment over arrest. But the latest figures show no signs of any reversal to the leading cause of accidental death across the state and the country. "It's definitely is an epidemic, and the ripple effects grow out, out, out," Alison Carter said. Prescription painkiller deaths remained flat last year, but heroin deaths - which have tripled since 2011- have continued to rise. More heroin overdoses were recorded in 2014- 15 than in 2010 through 2013 combined. That spike has been fueled in large part by new regulations that slowed the growth of painkiller prescriptions and unintentionally opened a larger market for heroin. People addicted to pills began using the illegal substance because it affects the same receptors in the brain. "We control those prescriptions so we're able to kind of squeeze out what the excess is and try to ensure the prescriptions are getting to the right people. But with illicit drugs, you can't really do that," said Rosie Hobron, a forensic epidemiologist with the state Office of the Chief Medical Examiner who tabulates and studies statewide overdose data. "What do you do with heroin when it's not something like prescription opiates that you can monitor who is taking the prescription, who is writing the prescription? I don't know if there's a good answer." The numbers, Hobron said, represent a best-case scenario. Between 100 and 200 other possible overdoses from last year are still being investigated, meaning the official death toll is likely to rise. Hobron said the 882 deaths currently attributed to heroin and prescription painkillers is likely to surpass 1,000 once all the additional death cases become final. "Certainly the numbers are deeply troubling, and it is really important to underscore that every one of these, behind every one of these deaths, that's a life and a family that is tragically impacted," said Herring, who has spent the past couple of years raising awareness about Virginia's opiate epidemic. "It does take time for all of those policies to begin to take effect and get the number down. We are making progress in a number of areas. . We need to do more." Herring and others agree that the complexities of heroin and painkiller addiction make the problem difficult to solve and require commitment from communities alongside nearly every level of government. The conversations about addiction have changed as people become more aware that it's an illness instead of a moral failure, he said. And some policies have helped reduce the number of people taking painkillers long-term, but there has been little progress on providing help for people who are already addicted. The state included $ 11 million in its budget for next year aimed at reducing or eliminating the months-long waiting list that addicts face when they turn to the state for addiction treatment. But that money primarily will go toward medication- assisted treatment, or programs that use replacement drugs such as methadone and buprenorphine, which some addiction specialists criticize as trading one addictive drug for another. Private recovery outfits including The Healing Place and the McShin Foundation in Henrico County, which avoid medication- assisted treatment and waiting lists for their patients, often find themselves scrambling for enough money to keep operating. The Healing Place, for example, lost $ 75,000 from United Way last year when funding went instead toward helping the homeless. The new state funding will be available only to people who qualify for Medicaid. "A lot of the people who have addiction now don't qualify for Medicaid. ... I suspect a lot of people who need the treatment are going to be in that area that won't get it, so it's not a perfect solution," Secretary of Health and Human Resources William A. Hazel Jr. said Friday. "When we are fundamentally under-resourced in mental health and substance abuse, you can get into a situation where it all helps, but it's not enough. "We don't have a lone ranger with a silver bullet to ride in and solve this." The text from his mother read, "Call me. I have bad news." Graham Carter's younger brother Zack knew what must have happened when he awoke to it and dozens of missed calls after a night out at a friend's bachelor's party in Las Vegas. "In a way, I had been waiting for that call, and knowing it was going to come made it even more unreal," he said. "You put so much power on that moment, and then, when it happens, it feels like a dream." The first time he thought his older brother might have a drug problem, they were talking about Graham's marijuana use. It was the summer after Graham graduated from high school. "He said, ' When I'm ready to stop, I'll go see a hypnotist,'" Zack Carter recalled. "It sounded bizarre that he needed some outside force to intervene." In hindsight, he said, Graham exhibited compulsive behaviors early on. He couldn't resist junk food and would play video games seemingly endlessly. Strange, but nothing like what came after. The lying, the stealing - the moments when Zack had to choose between breaking his parents' hearts with the truth or lying about Graham's drug use to keep the peace- all weighed on him. Gone was the good-natured, whip-smart boy of his youth. Zack found himself keeping a slight distance from the man his brother had become, the best version of which Zack last saw the fall before Graham's death. He seemed relaxed then, at peace even, during a family celebration of their mother's birthday, Zack recalled. But the worry persisted. "I found myself mourning well before he died," Zack Carter said. "It happens gradually; he wasn't who he had been anymore, and part of me had already dealt with losing that first brother." More than 4,700 people have died of heroin and painkiller overdoses in Virginia since 2007. And for every death, there are those left behind. "This is very much a family disease," Alison Carter said. "Sometimes, you help the most when you help the least, but it's hard to know how and when to let go." She will spend the rest of her days thinking and then trying to forget about the ins and outs of Graham's struggle, which in many ways became the fight of her life. "I would have died for him," she said. "I can't help but wonder if, in some way, the pain we're feeling now is a trade-off for him not having to feel pain anymore." What could they have done differently? Better? Service providers and experts are at odds over how best to help - with medications to ease withdrawal symptoms, or not? In outpatient settings, or inpatient? If inpatient, who will pay? The cost of admittance for intensive services can be high, and higher still when insurers decline to cover a problem that has long been seen as a moral failing. All that is changing, but not soon enough, Alison Carter said. "You don't have to be a heroin junkie to be a heroin user," she said. "This disease is an equal-opportunity problem with devastating consequences for everyone it touches." Last Monday marked the first anniversary of Graham's death. Alison Carter sought solace in the mundane; a day that flowed into the next like any other. But she did send a message to the number that had been his. "I texted him and told him how much I miss him and that it hasn't gotten any easier," she said. "I guess one day it will." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom