News (Media Awareness Project) - US CT: Doctors Fear Deadly Heroin Mix |
Title: | US CT: Doctors Fear Deadly Heroin Mix |
Published On: | 2006-06-17 |
Source: | Hartford Courant (CT) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 02:21:35 |
DOCTORS FEAR DEADLY HEROIN MIX
Spike In Overdoses Raises Concern About Spreading Synthetic Opiate
A deadly mixture of fentanyl-tainted heroin that has claimed the
lives of hundreds of addicts across the country might be in
Connecticut, officials said.
Although the tainted opiate has not been reported by the Connecticut
Poison Control Center or area hospitals, emergency room doctors at
Hartford Hospital are concerned about a spike in the number of
heroin-addicted patients seeking emergency care in the past week.
"They were not breathing and were at death's door," said Dr. Michael
Drescher, the associate chief of the division of emergency medicine
at Hartford Hospital. In the past week, Drescher treated three
patients, and he said colleagues treated several more. One person is
in a coma, the others were revived, Drescher said.
Drescher could not say for sure what the patients had ingested, but
he believed it was an opiate. Fentanyl, a narcotic painkiller, is a
synthetic opiate that is approximately 50 times more potent than
heroin, according to the Justice Department. The patients treated at
Hartford Hospital were heroin addicts, mostly men in their 20s.
"This stuff is so poisonous that the victims are found with the
needles still in their arms. They go unconscious and it affects their
breathing," Drescher said.
"I wouldn't be surprised if it has arrived," said Dr. Charles McKay,
of the state's poison control center. He said he received an alert
several months ago that the drug might be on its way. No samples
being tested by the state laboratory in criminal cases has shown
traces of fentanyl.
Fentanyl-laced heroin has been leaving a deadly trail since 2005 in
mostly Midwest, Mid-Atlantic and Northeast cities and states, such as
Camden, N.J., Detroit, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Maryland,
and Wilmington, Del., according to the Justice Department.
Last month, law enforcement authorities in Mexico seized a fentanyl
laboratory, and in February, U.S. Customs and Border Protection
agents seized a shipment of fentanyl powder near the U.S.-Mexico
border, the Justice Department report said.
The extent of the problem didn't become apparent, the Justice
Department said, until "the public health community noticed
above-average numbers of overdoses."
While Hartford Hospital noticed an increase of overdoses recently, a
spokesman at St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford said
"there were no significant overdoses in the past week."
John Betz, the commander of the Hartford police vice and narcotics
division, said his detectives have not received any complaints about
bad heroin in the city.
Every time a heroin addict uses the drugs, "you have no idea who made
it and what you are taking. You are literally taking your life in
your hand," Betz said.
Jim Siemianowski, a spokesman for the Department of Mental Health and
Addiction Services, said Friday his department will forward the alert
it received from the Justice Department on Friday to health providers
across the state.
"It's always of concern given the potential lethality," Siemianowski
said. "We want to monitor it closely and look at what we can do to
alert people who are potentially using."
Spike In Overdoses Raises Concern About Spreading Synthetic Opiate
A deadly mixture of fentanyl-tainted heroin that has claimed the
lives of hundreds of addicts across the country might be in
Connecticut, officials said.
Although the tainted opiate has not been reported by the Connecticut
Poison Control Center or area hospitals, emergency room doctors at
Hartford Hospital are concerned about a spike in the number of
heroin-addicted patients seeking emergency care in the past week.
"They were not breathing and were at death's door," said Dr. Michael
Drescher, the associate chief of the division of emergency medicine
at Hartford Hospital. In the past week, Drescher treated three
patients, and he said colleagues treated several more. One person is
in a coma, the others were revived, Drescher said.
Drescher could not say for sure what the patients had ingested, but
he believed it was an opiate. Fentanyl, a narcotic painkiller, is a
synthetic opiate that is approximately 50 times more potent than
heroin, according to the Justice Department. The patients treated at
Hartford Hospital were heroin addicts, mostly men in their 20s.
"This stuff is so poisonous that the victims are found with the
needles still in their arms. They go unconscious and it affects their
breathing," Drescher said.
"I wouldn't be surprised if it has arrived," said Dr. Charles McKay,
of the state's poison control center. He said he received an alert
several months ago that the drug might be on its way. No samples
being tested by the state laboratory in criminal cases has shown
traces of fentanyl.
Fentanyl-laced heroin has been leaving a deadly trail since 2005 in
mostly Midwest, Mid-Atlantic and Northeast cities and states, such as
Camden, N.J., Detroit, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Maryland,
and Wilmington, Del., according to the Justice Department.
Last month, law enforcement authorities in Mexico seized a fentanyl
laboratory, and in February, U.S. Customs and Border Protection
agents seized a shipment of fentanyl powder near the U.S.-Mexico
border, the Justice Department report said.
The extent of the problem didn't become apparent, the Justice
Department said, until "the public health community noticed
above-average numbers of overdoses."
While Hartford Hospital noticed an increase of overdoses recently, a
spokesman at St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford said
"there were no significant overdoses in the past week."
John Betz, the commander of the Hartford police vice and narcotics
division, said his detectives have not received any complaints about
bad heroin in the city.
Every time a heroin addict uses the drugs, "you have no idea who made
it and what you are taking. You are literally taking your life in
your hand," Betz said.
Jim Siemianowski, a spokesman for the Department of Mental Health and
Addiction Services, said Friday his department will forward the alert
it received from the Justice Department on Friday to health providers
across the state.
"It's always of concern given the potential lethality," Siemianowski
said. "We want to monitor it closely and look at what we can do to
alert people who are potentially using."
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