News (Media Awareness Project) - US MD: Overdose deaths exceed slayings |
Title: | US MD: Overdose deaths exceed slayings |
Published On: | 2000-09-16 |
Source: | Baltimore Sun (MD) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 08:38:02 |
OVERDOSE DEATHS EXCEED SLAYINGS
Experts blame rise on purity of heroin
Drug overdoses killed more Baltimoreans than homicide for the first time
last year, part of a disturbing trend that has seen overdose deaths in
Maryland nearly triple in a decade.
Drug abuse experts blamed the trend on a steady rise in the purity of heroin
in recent years as South American suppliers have flooded the market. The
powerful narcotic may be catching by surprise inexperienced users or those
who have gotten off the drug while in prison, they said yesterday.
"If people leave prison and resume drug use when they get out, their
tolerance is down and they're very vulnerable to overdose," said John M.
Walsh, a researcher with the Washington policy institute Drug Strategies who
has spent the past year studying Baltimore's drug problem.
The state medical examiner's office reported that 324 people died of illegal
drug overdose in Baltimore last year, passing the total of 309 homicides. In
1998, there were 290 overdose victims and 313 homicides.
Last year, 515 people died of drug overdoses statewide, a 180 percent
increase from 1990. While Baltimore still accounts for most of the deaths,
the toll has been rising faster in suburban and rural areas.
Since 1990, overdose deaths in the five counties surrounding Baltimore
increased 336 percent, reaching 122 last year.
Heroin - sometimes in combination with cocaine or alcohol - accounts for the
overwhelming majority of drug deaths, more than 10 times as many as cocaine
alone. And the purity of heroin sold on the street has climbed steadily in
the past decade.
"You're seeing the consequences of middle-class America deciding this is a
chic drug," said Michael W. Gimbel, director of the Baltimore County bureau
of substance abuse.
The purity of heroin in capsules seized on the street in Baltimore in the
1980s was between 5 percent and 10 percent, said Special Agent William R.
Hocker of the Drug Enforcement Administration. Last year it averaged about
20 percent, he said.
Heroin seized in large quantities in the city last year - not yet diluted
with quinine powder for retail sale - ranged in purity from 60 percent to 95
percent, Hocker said.
"A lot of that's the availability of South American heroin," he said, which
is taking market share from traditional supplies originating in Asia.
The higher purity makes it possible to snort the heroin rather than
injecting it, which has made it more attractive to young users who fear
needles and the AIDS virus, which is often spread by shared needles.
Contrary to what many young users believe, fatal overdoses can occur when
the drug is snorted, said Dr. David R. Fowler, deputy chief medical
examiner.
"It can be just as dangerous to snort as to inject," said Fowler, who said
the huge surface area of the lungs allows the drug to enter the bloodstream
very rapidly. "We find heroin overdose deaths with no needle marks."
He said the crucial factor in overwhelming the part of the brain that
controls breathing is the rate at which the drug is ingested, not just the
quantity.
"Giving yourself a narcotic very rapidly is a very dangerous thing," Fowler
said.
If high-grade heroin is luring naive young users, it is also an attraction
for hard-core addicts. Far from being scared off by overdose reports, they
can sometimes be encouraged to seek the drug's power.
"There's that weird reversal in the drug addict's world," said Gimbel, who
himself was a heroin addict 30 years ago. "When there's killer heroin out
there, they actually want to get some."
The overdose statistics are the latest confirmation of the tenacity of the
drug problem in Baltimore, which officials estimate has about 60,000
addicts.
Despite a significant increase in drug treatment funding in recent years,
addicts seeking methadone or residential treatment still face long waits.
Mayor Martin O'Malley has said that drug treatment funding will be his top
priority in next year's General Assembly session.
According to the federal Drug Abuse Warning Network, Baltimore last year had
the highest rate among U.S. cities of emergency-room visits related to drug
abuse.
Experts blame rise on purity of heroin
Drug overdoses killed more Baltimoreans than homicide for the first time
last year, part of a disturbing trend that has seen overdose deaths in
Maryland nearly triple in a decade.
Drug abuse experts blamed the trend on a steady rise in the purity of heroin
in recent years as South American suppliers have flooded the market. The
powerful narcotic may be catching by surprise inexperienced users or those
who have gotten off the drug while in prison, they said yesterday.
"If people leave prison and resume drug use when they get out, their
tolerance is down and they're very vulnerable to overdose," said John M.
Walsh, a researcher with the Washington policy institute Drug Strategies who
has spent the past year studying Baltimore's drug problem.
The state medical examiner's office reported that 324 people died of illegal
drug overdose in Baltimore last year, passing the total of 309 homicides. In
1998, there were 290 overdose victims and 313 homicides.
Last year, 515 people died of drug overdoses statewide, a 180 percent
increase from 1990. While Baltimore still accounts for most of the deaths,
the toll has been rising faster in suburban and rural areas.
Since 1990, overdose deaths in the five counties surrounding Baltimore
increased 336 percent, reaching 122 last year.
Heroin - sometimes in combination with cocaine or alcohol - accounts for the
overwhelming majority of drug deaths, more than 10 times as many as cocaine
alone. And the purity of heroin sold on the street has climbed steadily in
the past decade.
"You're seeing the consequences of middle-class America deciding this is a
chic drug," said Michael W. Gimbel, director of the Baltimore County bureau
of substance abuse.
The purity of heroin in capsules seized on the street in Baltimore in the
1980s was between 5 percent and 10 percent, said Special Agent William R.
Hocker of the Drug Enforcement Administration. Last year it averaged about
20 percent, he said.
Heroin seized in large quantities in the city last year - not yet diluted
with quinine powder for retail sale - ranged in purity from 60 percent to 95
percent, Hocker said.
"A lot of that's the availability of South American heroin," he said, which
is taking market share from traditional supplies originating in Asia.
The higher purity makes it possible to snort the heroin rather than
injecting it, which has made it more attractive to young users who fear
needles and the AIDS virus, which is often spread by shared needles.
Contrary to what many young users believe, fatal overdoses can occur when
the drug is snorted, said Dr. David R. Fowler, deputy chief medical
examiner.
"It can be just as dangerous to snort as to inject," said Fowler, who said
the huge surface area of the lungs allows the drug to enter the bloodstream
very rapidly. "We find heroin overdose deaths with no needle marks."
He said the crucial factor in overwhelming the part of the brain that
controls breathing is the rate at which the drug is ingested, not just the
quantity.
"Giving yourself a narcotic very rapidly is a very dangerous thing," Fowler
said.
If high-grade heroin is luring naive young users, it is also an attraction
for hard-core addicts. Far from being scared off by overdose reports, they
can sometimes be encouraged to seek the drug's power.
"There's that weird reversal in the drug addict's world," said Gimbel, who
himself was a heroin addict 30 years ago. "When there's killer heroin out
there, they actually want to get some."
The overdose statistics are the latest confirmation of the tenacity of the
drug problem in Baltimore, which officials estimate has about 60,000
addicts.
Despite a significant increase in drug treatment funding in recent years,
addicts seeking methadone or residential treatment still face long waits.
Mayor Martin O'Malley has said that drug treatment funding will be his top
priority in next year's General Assembly session.
According to the federal Drug Abuse Warning Network, Baltimore last year had
the highest rate among U.S. cities of emergency-room visits related to drug
abuse.
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