Pubdate: Fri, 19 Nov 1999 Source: Santa Cruz County Sentinel Section: Front Page Copyright: 1999 Santa Cruz County Sentinel Contact: PO Box 638, Santa Cruz, CA 95061 Fax: (408) 429-9620 (Attn: Santa Cruz County Sentinel) Feedback: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/news/edit/let.htm Website: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/ Author: Darrel W. Cole, Sentinel staff writer PROGRAM AIMS TO REDUCE HEROIN OVERDOSES SANTA CRUZ - Fear is a powerful incentive to not take action. And that's a barrier a number of area agencies and the Santa Cruz Needle Exchange Program are determined to break through with a new education program. The program aims to inform heroin users that a call to 911 in the event of a medical emergency will not mean punishment even though possessing heroin is illegal. The countywide needle exchange program provides more than 2,000 intravenous drug users with clean needles. In October, Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation legalizing needle exchange programs. The Santa Cruz program grew out of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s. To help curb transmission among addicts, some of it attributable to dirty needles, a group of Santa Cruz residents began trading clean needles for dirty ones in motel rooms and on street corners. But now county health officials and others are concerned about the 89 deaths in the county between 1995 and 1998 attributed to heroin. Cracking down on use isn't the way to stop the overdoses, according to needle exchange officials. They point to new research that suggests that 65 percent of needle-exchange participants who have overdosed or witnessed an overdose did not call 911 because they feared criminal charges. Those figures show that education - of the law enforcement community, health officials and drug users - will reduce deaths, said Kristen Ochoa, who led the study for UC San Francisco's General Hospital in cooperation with the Santa Cruz Needle Exchange and the Haight Ashbury Youth Outreach Team. To promote the new education program, a town hall meeting was held Thursday at the Santa Cruz County Health Services Agency auditorium. Presenters included Ochoa; Betsy McCarty, county chief of public health; Robert Swarner, a paramedic; Heather Edney-Meschery, executive director of the Santa Cruz Needle Exchange; and Jeff Locke, Santa Cruz deputy police chief. "This study shows us ... people are afraid to call 911 and that's a common perception," Edney-Meschery said. "The goal is to reduce fatalities, and we hope to do this by working with all the agencies." Ochoa said she interviewed 50 participants in the Santa Cruz program. Of those, 52 percent said they had overdosed before, while 65 percent said they had overdosed more than once. The problem, everyone agreed Thursday, is that those same people don't call for help for themselves or friends because they fear the police. But Locke said officers aren't looking to make arrests in those situations, but to save someone. But he acknowledged that it is a fine line, because possession of heroin is a felony. Locke and Swarner said a medical call does not mean an officer will arrive, and in the case of an overdose, rarely is there a charge. If there are drugs lying around, however, the officer will collect them, Locke said. In 28 years as an officer, he said, he couldn't recall a single prosecution of a heroin offense in an overdose case. According to Ochoa and Edney-Meschery, overdosing is common among heroin users not because someone is trying to commit suicide, but simply because the user "wants too much." "Intention falls into a gray area, where there are no plans to OD, but there is a kind of ambivalence about the possibility," Ochoa and Edney-Meschery wrote in their report. Because the primary barrier seems to be a fear of police involvement, the new education campaign also will attempt to teach users CPR and other life-saving techniques. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D