Source: British Medical Journal (No 7128 Volume 316) Author: Kamran Abbasi BMJ Pubdate: Saturday, 31 Jan 1998 Contact: The Editor, BMJ, BMA House, Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9JR Fax: +44 (0)171 383 6418/6299 Email: DEATHS FROM HEROIN OVERDOSE ARE PREVENTABLE A thousand deaths from heroin overdose each year could be prevented in Britain if emergency resuscitation drugs were supplied to addicts and their close contacts, according to a report presented to the Royal College of Psychiatrists' winter meeting last week. Professor John Strang, director of the National Addiction Centre at the Maudsley Hospital in London, suggested that premature deaths from drug overdoses account for the increased mortality among opiate addicts. A survey of heroin addicts in south London showed that over half of those undergoing treatment had overdosed in the past. These overdoses, however, were rarely suicide attempts. Professor Strang's team plans to involve addicts, and a nominated partner, in therapeutic training programmes, which will teach basic resuscitation techniques and the correct way of administering naloxone. Up to now, drug user communities have relied on unproved and potentially dangerous methods of resuscitation, such as injecting salt, placing the person in a cold bath, and injecting adrenaline through the breast bone as demonstrated by John Travolta in the film Pulp Fiction. In overdose, opiates cause pinpoint pupils, respiratory depression, and coma. Doctors in casualty departments regularly use naloxone, a specific antidote, to reverse the effects of a heroin overdose. As it is short acting, repeated injections and continuous infusions of naloxone are often needed. Now that naloxone is available as a nasal spray, Professor Strang's team hope to distribute it to heroin addicts as part of a pilot study. Dr David Best, research coordinator at the National Addiction Centre, said: "So many overdoses occur in the presence of friends and partners. If naloxone was available in drug user communities, when somebody overdosed, friends could place the patient in the recovery position, administer naloxone, and call for an ambulance."