News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Mix Of Heroin, Painkiller Is Linked To Fatal Overdoses |
Title: | US: Mix Of Heroin, Painkiller Is Linked To Fatal Overdoses |
Published On: | 2006-05-28 |
Source: | Orlando Sentinel (FL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 03:43:51 |
MIX OF HEROIN, PAINKILLER IS LINKED TO FATAL OVERDOSES
DETROIT -- Larry, a 53-year-old heroin addict, has two cardinal
rules: Never shoot up alone, and shoot up only one person at a time.
If one overdoses, "you need someone there to bring you back," he said.
Larry, who asked that his last name not be used because of his habit,
recited his rules after hearing that a mixture of heroin and a
powerful painkiller has been killing users who think they are taking
heroin alone.
Officials from Philadelphia to Chicago have reported deaths from the
drug, called fentanyl and considered 80 times more powerful than
morphine. In the Detroit area -- the apparent hub of the problem with
more than 100 confirmed cases since last fall and as many as 41
possible deaths in the past eight days -- officials from the national
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are investigating, and
community organizations are scrambling to get the word out to users.
The CDC says it has no national statistics on fentanyl deaths. But
individual reports from a scattering of states indicate the drug
mixture is widespread.
Philadelphia has had 20 confirmed deaths from heroin mixed with
fentanyl since April 17, and test results are pending in eight
suspected cases, the city health department said.
In New Jersey, where officials first raised the alarm about the drug
in April, there have been about 10 confirmed fentanyl deaths and 10
to 20 suspected cases since last month, according to the state's
poison-control center.
In Chicago, 30 people died from fentanyl or fentanyl-laced heroin
from September 2005 to March 2006, said Christopher Hoyt, a spokesman
for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in that city.
In Wayne County, which includes Detroit, Medical Examiner Carl J.
Schmidt said he began noticing a rise in fentanyl-related deaths in
September. In total, medical examiners found 63 people who died in
Wayne County with fentanyl in their blood last year. From the
beginning of 2006 to mid-April, there were 70 such cases.
County officials did not begin treating fentanyl as a crisis until
last week, when the number of overdoses began to soar.
It was clear something was amiss when 12 people died of overdoses May
18-19, Schmidt said.
The drug kills by inhibiting respiration, Schmidt said. "It literally
suppresses your natural impulse to breathe," he said.
DETROIT -- Larry, a 53-year-old heroin addict, has two cardinal
rules: Never shoot up alone, and shoot up only one person at a time.
If one overdoses, "you need someone there to bring you back," he said.
Larry, who asked that his last name not be used because of his habit,
recited his rules after hearing that a mixture of heroin and a
powerful painkiller has been killing users who think they are taking
heroin alone.
Officials from Philadelphia to Chicago have reported deaths from the
drug, called fentanyl and considered 80 times more powerful than
morphine. In the Detroit area -- the apparent hub of the problem with
more than 100 confirmed cases since last fall and as many as 41
possible deaths in the past eight days -- officials from the national
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are investigating, and
community organizations are scrambling to get the word out to users.
The CDC says it has no national statistics on fentanyl deaths. But
individual reports from a scattering of states indicate the drug
mixture is widespread.
Philadelphia has had 20 confirmed deaths from heroin mixed with
fentanyl since April 17, and test results are pending in eight
suspected cases, the city health department said.
In New Jersey, where officials first raised the alarm about the drug
in April, there have been about 10 confirmed fentanyl deaths and 10
to 20 suspected cases since last month, according to the state's
poison-control center.
In Chicago, 30 people died from fentanyl or fentanyl-laced heroin
from September 2005 to March 2006, said Christopher Hoyt, a spokesman
for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in that city.
In Wayne County, which includes Detroit, Medical Examiner Carl J.
Schmidt said he began noticing a rise in fentanyl-related deaths in
September. In total, medical examiners found 63 people who died in
Wayne County with fentanyl in their blood last year. From the
beginning of 2006 to mid-April, there were 70 such cases.
County officials did not begin treating fentanyl as a crisis until
last week, when the number of overdoses began to soar.
It was clear something was amiss when 12 people died of overdoses May
18-19, Schmidt said.
The drug kills by inhibiting respiration, Schmidt said. "It literally
suppresses your natural impulse to breathe," he said.
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