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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Editorial: Just The Right Dose
Title:US CA: Editorial: Just The Right Dose
Published On:2006-01-30
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-18 21:37:07
JUST THE RIGHT DOSE

LOS ANGELES HAS THE CHANCE to save hundreds of lives this year for
only a few dollars each. By simply distributing naloxone - a safe and
legal drug-overdose medication - the city could drastically reduce
the number of deaths due to overdose, which has become one of the
state's most urgent public health crises.

In 2003, the latest year for which the state has figures, nearly
3,600 drug users died, up 73% since 1990. Los Angeles accounted for
nearly a fourth of that total.

That number surpasses deaths caused by firearms and AIDS, and it soon
could overtake auto accidents as the state's leading cause of accidental death.

It's hard to say why so many drug users are dying, but the trend
mirrors what's happening across the country.

A number of cities, including New York and Chicago, have begun
distributing syringes filled with naloxone, at a cost of about $3
each, to drug addicts. (The hope is that they will use them to save
friends who have overdosed.) Once injected, the non-mood-altering
medication works by reversing overdose symptoms such as respiratory
distress, bringing victims back within minutes.

Since beginning its overdose prevention program three years ago, San
Francisco, which has one of the highest rates of drug use in the
state, has seen drug deaths fall to fewer than 100 last year - their
lowest level in a decade.

Thankfully, Los Angeles County's public health director, Dr. Jonathan
Fielding, has taken a belated interest in the issue locally.

Fielding recently asked the county's narcotics advisory board to
study the topic, and he will probably ask the county Board of
Supervisors to approve a naloxone program as early as next month.

If the board approves the plan - a big if, considering its lukewarm
response to other programs aimed at reducing drug harm - the earliest
Fielding expects addicts could begin getting naloxone is later this year.

That is not soon enough.

By then, too many more people will have died in Los Angeles. Yes, all
the dead will be drug addicts.

But their deaths are still needless.

Ask yourself: If this were an antibiotic that was saving hundreds of
lives across the country, would you tolerate such a casual delay?

On a single day late last month, three people overdosed on skid row,
a tragedy that might not have happened if public health officials had
moved more quickly.

If cleaning up skid row is a priority for the city and county, then
one of the best places to start is with a naloxone program in Los Angeles.
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