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News (Media Awareness Project) - US GA: ERs See Heroin, Ecstasy Use Rising
Title:US GA: ERs See Heroin, Ecstasy Use Rising
Published On:2001-07-26
Source:Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA)
Fetched On:2008-09-01 00:05:22
ERS SEE HEROIN, ECSTASY USE RISING

Atlanta Among Cities Reporting Increases

Washington --- Emergency room visits following drug use rose past 600,000
to a record level last year as heroin-related visits jumped sharply and
those involving Ecstasy increased more than 50 percent.

More than 11,000 drug-related emergency room visits were reported in
Atlanta last year.

A survey of hospital emergency rooms in 21 cities showed increases in
drug-related visits in seven localities and declines in two, with the rest
including Atlanta --- remaining about the same as the year before, the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration reported Wednesday.

Atlanta, however, showed increases in emergency room visits related to
cocaine, heroin-morphine and methamphetamine-speed.

Overall, the annual report recorded 601,776 emergency room trips related to
drugs in 2000, up from 554,932 a year earlier and the highest since the
statistics first were collected in the mid-1980s.

"This report shows again that we face serious gaps in preventing and
treating substance abuse, especially with 'club' drugs," Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said.

"Our first line of defense against substance abuse must be prevention. We
need to reach out to people before they become statistics in emergency
departments --- or worse, in the morgue," he said in a statement.

The study found a 15 percent rise in emergency room visits related to
heroin and morphine, which jumped from 84,409 in 1999 to 97,287 last year.
And the increase for the club drug Ecstasy was 58 percent, from 2,850 to 4,511.

Drugs such as Ecstasy, Rohypnol and Ketamine are called club drugs because
of their popularity among young people, who tend to use them at dance clubs.

Cities reporting increases in overall drug-related emergency room trips
were Seattle, from 8,426 in 1999 to 11,116 in 2000; Boston, from 11,699 to
14,902; Los Angeles, from 20,678 to 25,288; Miami, from 7,128 to 8,560;
Chicago, from 26,158 to 30,330; Minneapolis, from 4,643 to 5,198; and
Phoenix, from 8,293 to 9,072.

There were decreases in Baltimore, from 14,172 to 11,505, and San
Francisco, from 8,930 to 7,857.

The totals remained about the same in other cities, with visits in 2000
listed as Atlanta, 11,114; Buffalo, N.Y., 2,899; Dallas, 6,798; Denver
4,946; Detroit, 17,042; New Orleans, 4,664; New York, 31,885; Newark, N.J.,
7,749; Philadelphia 23,433; St. Louis, 6,908; San Diego, 7,094; and
Washington, 10,303.

Other findings in the report:

Cocaine-related visits constituted 29 percent --- 174,896 --- of all
drug-related emergency room visits in 2000, more than any other illicit
substance measured.

Significant increases were reported in Atlanta, Los Angeles, Seattle,
Boston, Chicago and Miami. Decreases were noted in Baltimore, Newark,
Washington and New Orleans.

Heroin-morphine visits rose in Atlanta, Miami, New Orleans, Boston,
Buffalo, Chicago, Detroit and Minneapolis. There were decreases in
Baltimore and San Francisco.

Marijuana-hashish increases were reported in Seattle, Boston, Miami, San
Francisco, Minneapolis, Denver and Chicago.

Methamphetamine-speed was mentioned in 2 percent of drug-related emergency
room visits in 2000, rising from 10,447 to 13,513. Increases were reported
in Atlanta, Phoenix, Seattle, Los Angeles, Dallas and San Diego.

Emergency room mentions of prescription drugs containing oxycodone
increased 68 percent from 6,429 to 10,825. One brand of oxycodone,
OxyContin, has been blamed in several deaths, although it is not the only
drug containing oxycodone.
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