Pubdate: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Ben Mitchell and Jodie Menzies TWO DEAD, 13 SAVED: JUST A QUIET NIGHT ON THE STREETS By ambulance service standards it wasn't a busy night. Only two dead, from 15 suspected or confirmed heroin overdoses between 5pm Friday and dawn yesterday, rates as a relatively calm night these days. On the worst nights, ambulance officers have treated up to 50 drug overdose patients as the heroin epidemic spreads across Melbourne. The first overdose call on Friday came just eight minutes after the end of the working week. An ambulance was dispatched to a toilet block near the corner of Exeter Road and the Maroondah Highway in Croydon North at 5.08pm, where a young women had collapsed in a public toilet. She was resuscitated with Narcan, the powerful stimulant that reverses the effects of heroin. Across town and 11 minutes later, ambulance officers were reviving another overdose victim in Coronation Street, Footscray West. About an hour after the Footscray West call, the ambulance service had its third overdose call for the night. A young man unconscious under a bridge in Foster Street, Dandenong, was revived with Narcan. At 6.23pm, a minute after the Foster Street call, an ambulance crew sped to Springvale, where a male and female were unconscious in a park after using heroin. They left the park before the ambulance arrived. A Metropolitan Ambulance Service duty team manager, Mr Ron Eke, said units were finding it difficult to keep track of the number of overdoses treated each day. ``I try to keep tabs on heroin ODs, but the ambulance paramedics almost get blase about the fact that they're at a heroin overdose,'' Mr Eke said. ``There are a lot of very respectable people who might live next door to you and use heroin. It's not nice to think that someone who is a brother or sister, a wife or boyfriend loses their life sitting in a parked car at someone else's street - it is a really sad thing. ``(But) it is not confined to the seamy streets of Melbourne, it is right across the whole city.'' Ambulances were called to another two overdoses, one in Flemington, the other in Richmond, before the first death of the night. According to police, James McLarty, 28, was having a few beers with his girlfriend and a couple of mates in the backyard of his parents' Lalor house, when he decided he needed a hit. A Greensborough policeman, Senior Detective Allan Brown, said Mr McLarty and his girlfriend apparently went into the house to use heroin bought earlier in the day. By the time the girlfriend realised Mr McLarty was not breathing and called an ambulance, it was too late. The next call-out was also a fatal. A 30-year-old known heroin user, Mr David Scutt, was found slumped over the steering wheel of his car in Dickens Street, Elwood, at 9.02pm. Although no needles were found, his death is a suspected heroin overdose. Narcan was used to resuscitate Friday night's ninth overdose victim found in Raleigh Road, Maribyrnong at 9.13pm. Seven minutes later, the same treatment was used on the night's 10th victim at Abbotsford Street, North Melbourne. At 9.36, an ambulance crew found a man unconscious in his car at Sunshine, with a needle still stuck in his arm. The next call was to Broadmeadows Town Park, in Pearcedale Parade. Later still came the calls to Preston, where an overdose victim was found at a bus stop, and to St Kilda, where another was found in a Princes Street boarding house. This year's heroin toll so far is 62, compared with 48 road fatalities. - --- MAP posted-by: Pat Dolan