Doctors, trainers and directors gathered at a summit where the mental health needs of the league was a main focus.
The National Football League has decided to take a closer look at how it can treat mental health issues in the league, according to SportsIllustrated.
Recently the NFL held a Player Health Summit, which was led by Nyaka NiiLampti, a psychologist who is now the vice president of wellness clinical services for the league.
Physicians, trainers and directors of player engagement gathered at the summit with the goal of ensuring that the mental health needs of the 2,000 players in the NFL were being met.
Resources
In recent years there have been more mental health resources and regulations added to the NFL, but some players still aren’t aware of the help that’s available. Just as the NFL has emergency protocol set up in the event of player injuries, the goal is to have a strategy for mental health emergencies as well.
While more mental health resources are available to players than ever before, there is still a stigma that keeps some players from seeking help.
Stigma Lives On
As Solomon Thomas of the San Francisco 49ers explains, “Some guys won’t sit at the same lunch table as our team therapist, because they are like, I don’t want anyone to think something is wrong with me… There’s a huge stigma about that. People are still afraid of therapists, still afraid of getting help.”
Thomas lost his older sister to suicide, and has been an active supporter of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. “I realized what I can say can really help other people, or really help myself, or get a conversation started.”
In the high-pressure world of professional sports, a lot of athletes are also terrified of being cut or traded. “Guys are fighting for their job every day,” Thomas said. “So they don’t want to have anything seen as a disadvantage or a reason to not be the one chosen. ‘Oh, both of them have the same amount of yards and TDs (touchdowns), but he has mental health problems.’ That’s scary to some guys, but it’s something that needs to change.”
Thomas saw a big change in his performance once he started seeking help. “That’s all due to my head clearing up, or being able to freely live… If our brain’s not working, our bodies aren’t going to work.”
Thomas is also hoping the stigma against seeking help will change. “If guys do it more openly, and the culture of mental health changes in the NFL, I think that is going to change a lot. Because it is a very masculine, tough sport. If we start that change, it will echo throughout the whole league and society as well.”
There are only two accredited labs in the state that can determine the difference between hemp and marijuana.
As more states legalize hemp, prosecutors are dropping marijuana-related cases because of difficulties distinguishing it from marijuana.
“Everybody is struggling with this,” Peter Stout told The New York Times. Stout is the president of the Houston Forensic Science Center, a lab that does analysis for law enforcement agencies including the Houston Police Department.
What Is The Difference?
Hemp and marijuana are different strains of the cannabis sativa plant. Under federal law, hemp was legalized as part of the 2018 Farm Bill. The bill described hemp as a cannabis plant containing less than 0.3% THC, the active ingredient in marijuana that gets people high. Many state laws align with this definition.
While that distinction is clear legislatively, it remains difficult to determine the difference between marijuana and hemp both by physical appearance and in court.
“It’s not different at all,” Bob Gualtieri, sheriff in Florida’s Pinellas County, told the Tampa Bay Times. “I wish it was pink. That would make it easier.”
In Texas, many prosecutors have dropped or declined to prosecute cases involving marijuana because there are only two labs that are accredited with the state that can determine the difference between marijuana and hemp. Prosecutors who cover Houston, Austin and San Antonio have all stopped pursuing cannabis crimes.
“Some of you have recently dismissed marijuana possession cases or announced you will not prosecute misdemeanor marijuana possession cases without a lab test,” the letter reads. “Marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas, and these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how H.B. 1325 works.”
The letter goes on to say that lab tests are not required to prove that a substance is marijuana, not hemp.
“Failing to enforce marijuana laws cannot be blamed on legislation that did not decriminalize marijuana in Texas,” the letter reads.
However, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said that lab testing “has long been required” to prosecute marijuana cases.
Texas lawyer Brandon Ball agreed. “The law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal, based on its chemical makeup,” he said. “It’s important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they’re charged with.”
Even the Drug Enforcement Administration has trouble distinguishing between hemp and marijuana. Earlier this year, the agency put out a call for a device that could properly identify the substance out in the field.
Seeing a business opportunity, companies are scrambling to make a fast and affordable test to distinguish between the two. Syndicate Alliance is one company in the process of creating a field test kit for determining whether a substance is marijuana or hemp. John Waldheim, COO and co-founder of the company, said that he expects to distribute 30,000 kits before the end of the summer.
The use of mental health patients in fear-based entertainment has been long debated.
A “Psych Ward” themed escape room will get a new theme by the end of the year, after a local non-profit organization voiced concern over the stigmatizing stereotype that the room seemed to play on.
The escape room is a popular group activity that challenges small groups of players to solve puzzles in order to escape different scenarios. This one in particular, created by The Escape Room in West Des Moines and Ankeny, Iowa, players must race the clock to figure out where Dr. Shaston Gunter, a chemical engineer admitted to the psychiatric ward, will release a toxic chemical in the city.
Stigma
This type of scenario stigmatizes people living with mental illness, says a local mental health organization.
“It’s because of the negativity and stereotypes related to mental illness they think this is okay,” said Peggy Huppert, executive director of the Iowa chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI). “It’s actually very hurtful.”
“It was the name and the description which we objected to, which plays on all the stigma and negative stereotypes that the psych ward is something to be scared of, it’s a scary place, the people in it are scary,” she added.
NAMI requested that The Escape Room end its “Psych Ward” room. Owner Nate Tvedt said they will replace it with a brand new theme by the end of the year.
While he acknowledged that the current theme may be offensive to some, he said that the room is more focused on the puzzles rather than the psych ward setting. “We’ve had thousands of people come in and go through this room,” said Tvedt. “It’s not a scary room on the inside. The room itself, once you get inside of it, it’s just harmless puzzles.”
While some have said that NAMI is being “too sensitive” about the game, it’s not hard to see why it would be offensive to people affected by mental illness. The psych ward or “asylum” is a pretty common theme in the escape room world. And they are often accompanied by stereotypical images of, for example, a dilapidated and filthy hospital room with eerie markings scrawled on the walls.
The use of mental health patients in fear-based entertainment has been long debated.
Is it harmless fun? Or should “asylum” themed horror attractions be shunned altogether?
The suit also alleged that the man had become addicted in part due to Juul’s marketing strategy.
The e-cigarette company Juul has been sued by a Connecticut man who claimed that his addiction to their products caused him to experience a debilitating stroke.
Maxwell Berger, 22, said that he became addicted to Juul products while in high school, and within two years’ time, was using two cartridges a day.
In 2017, Berger claimed that he had a massive stroke that left him with left side paralysis, speech impairment and a 50% loss of vision in both eyes.
The suit also alleged that Berger had become addicted in part due to Juul’s marketing strategy, which targeted young people. In a statement to Forbes, a spokesperson for Juul said that the lawsuit was “without merit.”
The suit was filed in San Franscisco County Superior Court by Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, a law firm that has been involved in numerous cases involving corporations and suits against tobacco companies.
As Forbes noted, the suit alleged that Juul was responsible for fraudulent concealment and intentional misrepresentation of the products and their risks, as well as negligence in promoting and selling them to people under the age of 26.
The Allegations
In the suit, Berger claimed that he developed a dependency on Juul products in the summer of 2015 after his last year of high school. Within two years’ time, he was vaping every 10 minutes, interrupting family meals to use his device and ultimately consuming two cartridges, or pods, per day.
Berger claimed that in July 2017, his Juul consumption caused him to have a massive hemorrhagic stroke that required three brain surgeries and more than 100 days in the hospital.
As Forbes noted, the suit alleged that Berger was left with “catastrophic and permanent injuries,” including paralysis, impaired speech and loss of vision in both eyes.
Juul spokesperson Ted Kwong told Forbes in a statement, “We do not want non-nicotine users, especially youth, to use our product. To this end, we have launched an aggressive action plan to combat underage use, as it is antithetical to our mission. To the extent these cases allege otherwise, they are without merit and we will defend our mission throughout this process.”
To deter interest in their product by young people, Juul has shuttered its social media accounts in the United States and eliminated its fruit-flavored products while also supporting initiatives that would increase the minimum smoking age to 21.
For critics, such efforts have come too late. They point to Juul’s early advertising campaign, which featured young models, bright colors and meme-like text—elements that could appeal to younger consumers.
Juul co-founder Adam Bowen later said that these early ads were “inappropriate,” but also suggested that they had “no impact on sales.”
The Linkin Park vocalist passed away on July 20, 2017, the birthday of his late friend Chris Cornell.
Saturday, July 20, marked two years since we lost Linkin Park vocalist Chester Bennington to suicide. He was 41.
His familypaid tribute to the late singer on social media. His mother, Susan Eubanks, posted a photo of the two at a party on Twitter. “The last kiss I ever got from my wonderful boy! There are no words to explain how much I miss him! I want us all to celebrate his life today!” she wrote.
Bennington’s widow, Talinda, posted a video to Instagram Saturday, acknowledging the people who reached out to her on the anniversary of Chester’s passing. “I woke up this morning to lots of messages of love and support from my friends and family, and I wanted to pass along to you the same love and support,” she said.
“Today is going to be a really hard day for a lot of people, and that may be you, and I just want you to know that you’re loved, you matter, and the world means something with you in it. And today let’s make Chester proud, and take care of each other, because that’s what he would want us to do.”
Linkin Park also paid tribute to their former vocalist. “Remembering Chester today,” they said beneath a candid photo of Chester with the band that was posted on Instagram.
Chris Cornell’s Birthday
Saturday also marked the birthday of Chris Cornell, the vocalist of Soundgarden and Audioslave, who also died by suicide in May of 2017 at the age of 52.
Cornell’s widow, Vicky, posted a photo of the singer with their two children. His eldest daughter, Lillian, was not pictured. “Forever missed, forever loved,” she wrote in the caption.
The rockers’ deaths, happening within months of each other, shocked the world over. While both had a history of problematic substance use and depression, their deaths still felt painfully premature.
“For 13 years I watched my husband Chester struggle with depression and substance use,” she wrote on the initiative’s website. “I often felt scared and alone. I was uneducated about the challenges he faced and I wanted information—but finding answers to my questions and available help for our family was very difficult. After my husband lost his battle with depression and addiction, I knew I had to make a change to the mental health landscape.”
Sohn, who played a Baltimore police detective on The Wire, spent six minutes in jail before posting bail.
Actress Sonja Sohn, known for her roles on The Wire and The Chi, was arrested over the weekend for possession of cocaine and marijuana.
Police in North Carolina arrested Sohn just after midnight on Sunday (July 21), the Charlotte Observerreported. Sohn was a passenger in a vehicle that was pulled over in Manteo, a tourist destination in the Outer Banks.
Once the vehicle was stopped, a police canine indicated “the odor of a controlled substance,” the Dare County Sheriff’s Office said in a press release. Police found drugs in a purse in the vehicle.
Sohn, 55, whose legal name is Sonja Plack, was charged with possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia, both of which are misdemeanor offenses. However, she was also charged with felony possession of cocaine.
Posting Bail
Police said that Sohn was only in jail for about six minutes before she posted a $1,500 bail and was released.
“Plack was able to make bond and was released at the Dare County Detention Center,” the release said.
The driver of the vehicle was given a citation for having a revoked license and expired registration. The driver was not identified by police and does not appear to be facing drug charges.
The Nags Head Police Department, Manteo Police Department and U.S. Fish and Wildlife were also involved with the arrest, the release said.
Sohn was scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday (July 23) for an arraignment.
On the popular HBO show The Wire, Sohn played Baltimore police detective Shakima Greggs. On the show, Greggs is a narcotics detective who becomes romantically involved with a drug addict. In addition to The Wire, Sohn played Detective Samantha Baker on ABC’s Body of Proof. She also starred in Star Trek: Discovery as Dr. Gabrielle Burnham.
Corruption Documentary
TheBaltimore Sun reported that Sohn has also been working on a documentary about the Baltimore Police Department’s Gun Trace Task Force. The task force was riddled with corruption, and eight of the nine officers on it have faced federal charges including conspiracy and racketeering, according to Vox.
Officers on the task force robbed people, planted fake evidence and falsified their hours in order to be paid for overtime when they were not working. Officers on the force have been charged with conspiracy and racketeering.
Sohn and her representative did not comment on her arrest as of Wednesday morning.
“People are always against harm reduction programs at first. But once they see the results, their views change.” – Frederick Bernard, Liege Chief Commissioner of Police
My first visit to a safe consumption site (SCS), where people use illicit drugs under professional supervision, felt like a strange dream. On a tepid June day, I sat in a circular room decked with Star Wars posters in Liege, Belgium, drinking bitter coffee from a tiny plastic cup and listening to two Belgian police chiefs discuss the country’s first SCS, which had opened next to the police station nine months earlier. To my right, Liege Chief Commissioner Frederick Bernard praised the program for successfully removing illicit drug use from public spaces in Liege.
When I asked in halting French if the city had experienced pushback from other police or citizens about the site—especially considering that SCSs are illegal in Belgium—the commissioner waved his hand, saying, “People are always against harm reduction programs at first. But once they see the results, their views change.”
After our introductory meeting, Commissioner Bernard escorted a visiting police chief and me to the SCS, which was located on a pedestrian street near several restaurants and boutiques. Dominique Delhauteur, coordinator of TADAM, a private foundation that oversees the SCS, and a staff nurse met us at the door and welcomed us to a waiting area inside what looked like an old airplane hangar.
Using Illicit Drugs, with Supervision
A bald man with a long, forked beard and suspenders, it was hard to imagine that Delhauteur was once Belgium’s defense secretary. During our tour he recounted his bizarre journey from Parliament to coordinator of an illegal drug consumption site. Called Saf ti (a play on the word ‘safety’), the site had opened in September 2018.
“The city wanted to open a safe consumption room and they designated [TADAM] to open it,” explained Delhauteur, adding that mayor of Liege had been under pressure to do something about the open drug markets in Liege. “We were not put off by the illegality,” he adds, because local police supported the project from the beginning.
Currently, over 100 legal SCSs operate in 12 countries around the world, primarily Canada, Australia, and parts of Europe. Also called drug consumption rooms or supervised injection facilities, SCSs allow people to use drugs under the supervision of trained staff.
In order to prevent the spread of HIV, hepatitis C and other infections, SCSs offer sterile equipment for smoking or injecting drugs and provide education around safer use techniques. To prevent deaths, staff responds to overdoses and other emergencies. Most programs also offer wraparound services such as referrals to housing, healthcare, employment, and drug treatment programs. SCSs do not provide illicit drugs and forbid users to sell or share them onsite.
SCSs operate on a harm reduction model, which seeks to reduce the negative consequences of problematic drug use, such as death and disease, while at the same time recognizing that drug use is a part of our world. Harm reduction is a pragmatic approach to a complex problem, like providing condoms and safe sex education rather than pursuing the more elusive goal of abstinence for all people at all times.
Do Supervised Consumption Facilities Encourage Drug Use?
Opponents of SCSs argue that they encourage drug use—the same criticism often levied against other harm reduction programs such a syringe exchange or naloxone access. But although research on SCS outcomes is difficult (largely due to the ethical dilemma of creating a control group without access to SCSs and the difficulty of measuring illicit behaviors), existing reports point to positive outcomes for SCS users.
A 2014 review of 75 studies on SCSs around the world reported that the programs reduce drug use in public spaces, lower overdose rates, increase access to safer injection conditions (which can decrease infection and disease) and link users to healthcare. Other studies have reported lower overdose mortality, fewer ambulance calls, and a decrease in HIV infections among SCS participants.
A study published in Lancet on Insite, the first SCS in Vancouver, Canada, found a 35% decrease in overdose rates in the area immediately surrounding Insite (compared to a 9% decrease in the rest of the city). A study published in Addiction in 2007 reported that Insite users were 30% more likely to access drug treatment than non-participants. The study found no evidence that Insite increased or encouraged drug use.
How It Works
Saf ti – Liege, Belgium
During my tour of Saf ti in Liege, I was already aware of the benefits of SCSs (and their limitations, namely, that positive effects only extend to the site’s immediate area). But I wanted to see how the facilities actually worked.
Saf ti has only three rules: users must be 18 or older, they cannot sell or share drugs in the facility or surrounding area, and they must have a history of illicit drug use prior to their first visit. The program is open seven days a week at varying times and receives 50 or more visits per day, with some users returning several times a day. (To protect users’ privacy, our visit occurred outside operating hours.) Medical care for abscesses, burns (from smoking hot pipes), infections, or other complications is also available.
“We have a team of seven nurses, three social work educators, and two general practitioners who visit twice a week,” said Delhauter. “If someone asks for help, we listen and we help.”
After showing us the checkup room, which looked like any doctor’s office, Delhauteur led our little crew to the actual consumption area. Here, staff provides users with a tray containing sterile supplies for injecting (a syringe, a spoon, sterile water, alcohol wipes, and a filter to separate solid drugs from liquid after heating) or smoking (a pipe and a smoking filter). Heroin and cocaine are the primary drugs consumed at this site, with most heroin smoked and most cocaine injected (the reverse of drug trends in the U.S. and many other parts of Europe).
The injection room stands to the right of the supply counter. Several steel tables and chairs furnish the room, which is equipped with bright yellow biohazard containers to dispose of used injection materials.
Along one wall of the room, rows of tiny plastic drawers house multi-colored tourniquets, which are used to tie off the arm before injecting. Each tourniquet is labeled with the name of its owner so that it can be reused.
The smoking area stands to the left of the supply counter. The 12 steel smoking stalls resemble mini phone booths equipped with stools, tables for preparing drugs, and massive air vents to suck up smoke and sterilize the room. To facilitate cleaning and sterilization, every surface in the consumption area is metal.
Saf ti is clean, sterile, and professional, though I would hardly describe it as comfortable or inviting. Its purpose, of course, is to reduce health harms associated with illicit drug use, but it is also designed to conceal drug use from the public. The facility is hidden in plain sight on a busy street where passersby on their way to nearby shops and cafes would never guess that inside that unmarked warehouse, dozens of people take illegal drugs each day.
Quai 9 – Geneva, Switzerland
The Liege SCS was the first that I visited during a six-week drug policy tour through central Europe. The second facility, Quai 9 in Geneva, Switzerland, had a whole different personality.
If Saf ti hides in plain sight, Quai 9 makes no effort to hide at all. The building, a garish lime-green box, rises out of a concrete parking lot next to Geneva’s busiest train station. The setup to Quai 9 is similar to Saf ti. Before using the consumption rooms, participants enter a waiting area for intake. Quai 9’s waiting room resembles a coffee shop, except that in addition to espresso (served in tiny ceramic teacups), the shelves behind the expansive counter offer sterile drug use supplies, brochures on HIV and hepatitis C prevention, biohazard containers, and other resources. The room has tables and chairs and a medical office to the side where people can visit a nurse or doctor.
The Quai 9 consumption room is painted the same blinding green as the outside of the building. Several injection stations are equipped with biohazard containers for waste disposal and bottles of disinfectant for cleaning each station after use. In a smaller room cordoned off by a glass wall, users can sit at a metal table to smoke their drugs.
Quai 9 receives an average of 120 visits per day, 365 days a year. It opened in 2001 in response to a rash of infections and overdoses among Switzerland’s heroin user population. Like the rest of Europe and the United States, Switzerland experienced rapid growth in heroin use during the 1970s, accompanied by increases in overdose deaths and HIV transmission through needle sharing.
At first, Switzerland responded like the rest of the world, engaging law enforcement in harsh crackdowns on users and dealers. In the ensuing years, overdose deaths quadrupled from about 100 per year in the late 1970s to nearly 400 per year in the early 1990s. AIDS deaths related to injection drug use skyrocketed as well, from a handful per year in the early 1980s to a peak of 350 in 1994.
After Switzerland Implemented Harm Reduction Programs, Drug-Related Deaths Declined Sharply
But beginning in the late 1980s, Switzerland adopted a different approach to drug use, seeking to manage the harms rather than attempt to eliminate drugs altogether, which was proving impossible. The first SCS opened in Berne, Switzerland in 1986. In 1994, the Swiss also pioneered heroin-assisted treatment clinics, where heavily dependent users could receive prescription heroin under medical supervision, therefore reducing the user’s contact with the underground economy and associated crime. Since the implementation of these programs and harm reduction techniques, Switzerland has seen a 64% decline in drug-related deaths. The percentage of new HIV cases originating from injection drug use also plummeted from 50.7% during the 1990s to 2% in 2014.
Switzerland’s results could serve as a blueprint for drug policy in other countries, including the United States. In fact, in 2017 the American Medical Association threw their weight behind SCS, issuing a statement announcing the group had “voted to support the development of pilot facilities where people who use intravenous drugs can inject self-provided drugs under medical supervision.”
Plans to open SCSs are underway in several U.S. cities, though numerous roadblocks remain. In 2017, the Seattle City Council committed $1.3 million to open a site, while surrounding King County pledged $1 million towards the project. But Seattle’s new U.S. Attorney, who took office in April 2019, has vowed to block efforts.
Jesse Rawlins, Project Manager for the Public Defender Association, which is leading the SCS campaign, says that the Association is “rolling supervised consumption work into a larger local campaign focused on engagement and care for drug users.”
In 2018 New York City Mayor Bill DeBlasio put forth a pilot plan to open four SCSs, but the sites are still awaiting approval from the state Department of Health.
In May 2019, backed by a broad coalition of public and private sector stakeholders, a bill authorizing SCSs in San Francisco passed the California state Assembly. In January it will attempt to move through the Senate.
“We’ve done a lot of organizing and educating in San Francisco, and SCS has broad support here, but we continue to face frustrating delays, most recently the decision to hold the state legislation until next year,” says Laura Thomas of the San Francisco AIDS Foundation. “We know these delays are measured in lives lost and we’re looking for other ways to provide these services to keep people alive and get syringes off the streets.”
Safe Consumption Sites in the U.S. Face Opposition
In Philadelphia, a non-profit called Safehouse is suing the federal government for the right to open an SCS. The group enjoys support from local elected officials, including the mayor and the District Attorney, but federal prosecutors are gearing up for a court battle. Evidentiary hearings for U.S. v Safehouse are set for August 2019. The court’s decision may determine the future of SCS efforts across the nation.
“We have consistently maintained that overdose prevention, including supervised consumption, is a legal medical practice and not prohibited by federal law,” says Ronda Goldfein, Executive Director of the AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania. “A win in Philadelphia will diminish the fear of criminal and civil liability and will encourage other communities to push forward with efforts to save lives.”
U.S. resistance to SCS echoes the pushback from Europeans, Canadians and Australians when they first considered the programs. The fear that harm reduction will encourage drug use remains ingrained in the national psyche despite science that contradicts these claims. But during times of crisis, people often become willing to set fears aside and try new solutions. Europe implemented harm reduction programs at the peak of drug and HIV epidemics. The U.S. is currently facing a historic overdose crisis. Harm reduction programs once considered politically impossible are launching all over the country. If trends continue, legal safe consumption rooms might be in the U.S. sooner than we think.
Peter Muyshondt, Dominique Delhauteur, Marylene Tommaso, and Tessie Castillo
These classes offer participants useful knowledge that can be utilized in the event of a mental health emergency.
Mental Health First Aid is a term that’s gained a lot of momentum lately, especially with Lady Gaga’s Born This Way foundation, which encourages people to learn about mental health.
These classes began 12 years ago, and close to two million people have attended them since. In 2015, the government allotted $20 million for this program, and in most areas of the U.S. you can take this class for free.
Inside The Program
While an eight-hour seminar can’t take the place of seeing a therapist or mental health professional, the program has been likened to learning CPR to equip yourself with lifesaving skills.
Betsy Schwartz, an executive at the Mental Health First Aid program, says, “We’re not training anyone to be a professional. We’re only teaching people how to be an empathetic friend, family member or coworker.”
CNN had attended a Mental Health First Aid seminar in Ohio, a state that’s had to grapple with alarming rates of addiction and suicide.
As one social worker explained, “Ohio, since 1999, has had a 30% increase in suicide deaths and is above the national average for suicide rates. So it’s really important that we’re getting information in people’s hands. They’re not easy conversations to have and oftentimes people shy away from that.”
At this seminar, instructors explained the signs to look out for with depression and anxiety, and how to help calm a person in the midst of a panic attack.
The acronym ALGEE was introduced and explained.
A – Assess for risk of harm or suicide
L – Listen non-judgmentally
G – Give information and reassurance
E – Encourage professional help, if needed
E – Encourage self-help
Diving deeper into the final step, encourage self-help, one instructor explained, “It’s going to be very important to have some buy-in into [someone’s] own recovery. We all like to be able to say ‘I did this.’ Get them involved in those decision-making skills.”
One person who attended the class had lost a brother from suicide and had mental illness in her family. “Everyday in life you forget to listen and be aware,” she said. “If you’re uncomfortable, taking this class will help you become more confident in reaching out to somebody.”
The data depicts a clear “opioid belt” comprised of more than 90 counties across West Virginia, Virginia and Kentucky.
Where the pills went, death followed.
This is clear to see in a side by side comparison of recently released data showing exactly where—and to what extent—76 billion oxycodone and hydrocodone pills were distributed between 2006 and 2012, and CDC opioid death data from the same time period.
Record-Making Civil Action
The DEA’s database tracked the “path of every single pain pill sold in the United States,” the Washington Post reported. The Post and HD Media (the publisher of the Charleston Gazette-Mail in West Virginia) were granted access to the database last Monday (July 15) after a year-long effort to make the data available, in the largest civil action in U.S. history.
The Post analyzed millions of transactions from 2006 to 2012, and made the data searchable by state or county. It found that 75% of the pain pills (oxycodone and hydrocodone) were distributed by just six companies in this time period—McKesson Corp., Walgreens, Cardinal Health, AmerisourceBergen, CVS and Walmart.
The Post then compared this data alongside CDC opioid death data. This showed a clear correlation between the number of pain pills that were sent to a region and how many people died of opioid-related causes there.
The data, visualized in two separate maps, depicts a clear “opioid belt” comprised of more than 90 counties covering Webster County, West Virginia, southern Virginia, and Monroe County, Kentucky.
Rural communities in West Virginia, Kentucky and Virginia experienced the highest per capita opioid death rate during this time period.
As the Post reported, the national opioid death rate was 4.6 deaths per 100,000 residents. “But the counties that had the most pills distributed per person experienced more than three times that rate on average.”
Even more shocking was that “13 of those counties had an opioid death rate more than eight times the national rate… Seven of them were in West Virginia.”
“What [the drug companies] did legally to my state is criminal,” said U.S. Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia. “The companies, the distributors, were unconscionable. This was not a health plan. This was a targeted business plan. I cannot believe that we have not gone after them with criminal charges.”
So far Rochester Drug Cooperative, a drug distributor based in New York, has been the first and only to be hit with felony criminal charges for the illegal distribution of controlled substances.
Nearly 2,000 lawsuits against drug companies, including Johnson & Johnson and Purdue Pharma, are pending in federal court. The lawsuits claim that the companies irresponsibly marketed and distributed powerful opioid drugs with little consideration for the risk of patients becoming addicted or dying.
Users have reported feelings of déjà vu, hallucinatory smells, excitability and increased heart rate.
West Virginia State Police reported that three residents in Boone County may have overdosed as a result of “wasping,” which involves the use of wasp pesticide with methamphetamine.
When ingested—either by applying to meth, or inhaled or injected after being heated on a metal sheet—the active ingredients in wasp spray can block nerve signals in the brain, leading to excitability, hallucinations and other physical responses similar to what is experienced after meth use.
The ingredients are also toxic, and can result in respiratory failure, paralysis, and in rare cases, death.
Boone County has been under siege from an economic downturn and drug dependency for several years. The loss of coal mining as the region’s primary source of income has devastated local incomes and businesses, which in turn has spurred an increase in drug use.
A 2018 report found that Boone County ranked highest in the United States for opioid-related costs, at nearly $9,000 per person.
Wasping On The Rise
According to Boone County delegate and former sheriff Rodney Miller, incidents of “wasping” are on the rise in the area, which appears to be the latest in a series of Midwestern and southern states where the practice has taken root. He said that some area residents appear to be using wasp spray as an alternative to meth. Stores in the area have also reported excessive sales of wasp spray.
“It’s not an illegal substance, but it’s a cheaper substance,” said Miller. “A five-dollar can of wasp spray in a local store sure beats the street price of drugs.”
The active ingredients in wasp spray and other pesticides are called pyrethroids, which are lethal to insects but block nerve signaling in humans. According to ABC News, users have reported feelings of déjà vu, hallucinatory smells, excitability and increased heart rate.
But pyrethroids are also dangerous and potentially deadly when ingested, especially when inhaled. Respiratory failure or paralysis have been reported after wasping, as well as headaches, nausea, tremors, erratic behavior and swelling and redness of the feet and hands. In rare cases involving people with pre-existing lung conditions like asthma, the use can be fatal.
Boone County State Police are working with local medical and poison control centers to determine the best treatment for the potential side effects of wasping, which they intend to then release to state and national agencies.
“It’s a cheap fix, and you don’t know what [the] overall result of usage of this is going to be,” said Sgt. Charles Sutphin. “From what we’re being told, if you use it, you know, you might use it once or twice and be fine, but the third time, when your body hits the allergic reaction, it can kill you.”