Tag: opioids

  • Patrick Kennedy On The State Of Addiction, Suicide Rates

    Patrick Kennedy On The State Of Addiction, Suicide Rates

    “If this were some other illness that evoked the same type of compassion that other illnesses receive, we would be spending dramatically more money to combat these rising suicide and overdose rates,” Patrick Kennedy said.

    Patrick Kennedy recently spoke to US News about the latest statistics on addiction and suicide and what he believes could be at the root of the problem.

    Kennedy says recent news about the drop in US life expectancy due to suicide and drug overdose deaths was “extremely shocking, but frankly, not surprising.”

    He added, “As a nation, we’re absolutely in denial about how bad this crisis is. If this were some other illness that evoked the same type of compassion that other illnesses receive, we would be spending dramatically more money to combat these rising suicide and overdose rates.”

    Kennedy has been very vocal about the stigma surrounding addiction and mental health. In his book, A Common Struggle, he detailed his own experience of living with addiction and bipolar disorder. Kennedy believes stigma plays a massive role in preventing people with addiction and/or mental health issues from getting the treatment they need.

    “The real tragedy is what it says about the people who suffer from these illnesses – they’re still shamed by their illness, they’re overwhelmingly stigmatized,” he tells US News. “They’re relegated to a system of care that is substandard at best.”

    Addressing the increased rates of addiction and suicide, Kennedy said, “There is obviously great complexity to all of the causes and how they converge together to create the crisis that we’re in right now,” and he also felt “there’s a well-established narrative here that pharma had a huge responsibility for this, and there should be a huge national settlement in helping to create this crisis…”

    Kennedy added, “I think that both insurance companies and Big Pharma made a lot of money in this process, and a lot of people died. And I think if we’re going to go after the pharmaceutical industry, then it would be absolutely inexplicable why we would not also go after the insurance industry with the same fervor for their part in letting this crisis unfold without doing what we needed to do to address it.”

    Kennedy also took time to reflect on the 10-year anniversary of the Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, which he called “a medical civil rights bill” where people are treated for mental health and addiction on the same “primary care level, secondary care level and tertiary care level as you would find when treating any other medical surgical illness.”

    Yet Kennedy recently acknowledged that the act still has a long way to go, and he started a website in October called Don’t Deny Me, where people can report insurance companies that won’t cover their addiction and mental health issues.

    He told The Washington Post, “There are plenty of solutions to bring people the care they need, but what is missing is the political will and the economic and legal pressure to make it happen and that’s why we’re marking the anniversary.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • American Overdose: An Interview with Chris McGreal

    American Overdose: An Interview with Chris McGreal

    In American Overdose, McGreal lays bare the shady behavior of greedy pharmaceutical executives, duplicitous lobbyists, and crooked doctors who helped to perpetuate the worst drug epidemic in American history.

    Shortly after I woke yesterday morning [on November 29, 2018] I went to the New York Times website, where I saw a report indicating that drug overdose deaths in the United States set a new record last year. There were over 70,000 of them, mostly due to opioids, especially strong synthetics like fentanyl (which often gets mixed with heroin to provide a more potent high). That is far more than the number of Americans who died from car accidents last year (40,200), or guns (38,440). Opioid abuse is also a big part of the reason that life expectancy in the United States has actually diminished over the past three years. This phenomenon, the Times says, is unprecedented since World War II.

    Later in the afternoon, I had the chance to discuss the crisis with the British-born journalist Chris McGreal, a Guardian reporter who is the author of American Overdose: The Opioid Tragedy in Three Acts (Public Affairs, 2018). It is a sharply-etched and tenaciously reported book that exposes the massive corruption that allowed the epidemic to reach such staggering proportions. He shows how Purdue Pharma continued to profit mightily from opioids, even after it became widely known that the narcotics they pushed were destroying lives and killing people. And he breaks new ground in showing the degree to which the FDA allowed that to happen. McGreal writes with admiration for those who recognized what was brewing – and who tried to ward off the crisis – but this is a story with far more villains than heroes. He lays bare the shady behavior of greedy pharmaceutical executives, duplicitous lobbyists, and crooked doctors who helped to perpetuate the worst drug epidemic in American history. We spoke at length; the following interview is significantly edited for brevity, and lightly edited for clarity.

    You and I both saw the same New York Times report this morning. If you look at the statistics, you see that most of the 70,000 overdose deaths last year are concentrated in a few regions. In American Overdose, you focus largely on southern West Virginia. Why are some places, and not others, having the hardest time with the addiction crisis?

    Well, if you look at those areas where the epidemic began, they became the crucible because they were targeted for the selling of opioids, and particularly high-strength opioids, like Oxycontin. And that is because these are regions where you have a lot of manual labor, a large number of people who work in jobs that take a real physical toll. And they’ve often used some form of “painkiller” (for lack of a better word), whether it was moonshine or marijuana, or different forms of pills, or lower levels of opioids. But when Oxycontin came along, and they looked where to market it, these were logical places. Drug companies simply buy up data from pharmacies about what drugs are being prescribed. So, they know where to go.

    By the late 1990s, it was becoming clear that the mass prescribing of opioids was causing tremendous harm. Oxycontin acquired significant value as a street drug, and people were getting addicted and dying. How did the drug industry respond?

    One of the reasons I wanted to write this book is because I was hit by the question: “Why has [the opioid epidemic] gone on so long?” You mentioned the 1990s, but it’s really only now that we’re having a proper national discussion about this epidemic. How did it drag on for twenty years? Where were the institutions that were supposed to protect Americans from this kind of thing?

    When you go back and look to the early 2000s, you learn that in fact there were warning signals, and they were made very loud and clear, particularly by some people who emerge as heroes in this story. One of them, for instance, is Dr. Jane Ballantyne. (She was the head of pain management at Harvard University and its associated hospital, Massachusetts General.) Initially, she buys into the idea that opiates are a magic bullet for pain treatment. But she starts to see, in her own patients, that this wasn’t true. She sees that in fact, once a person has been on opioids for a long time, their pain isn’t diminishing – it’s actually getting worse. Plus, they’re becoming dependent and addicted. So, she gathers data, and eventually in 2003 she publishes a paper in the New England Journal of Medicine saying, “We need to pause, we need to rethink this strategy of mass prescribing opioids.” And she said to me, “I thought that would be a wakeup call.”

    She thought the drug industry – and if not the industry, then at least federal institutions that regulate the drug industry, such as the FDA – would sit up and take notice and say, “Wait a minute, is this the right thing to do?”

    Instead, the industry decides it wants to change the conversation, and make people look in the other direction. So, they start a campaign that says the people who become addicted to these drugs are abusers. They are misusing the drugs, so they are to be blamed for their condition. They begin blaming the victim. And they say, “Meanwhile, look over here: There are tens of millions of Americans who live with chronic pain. They’re the real victims in all of this, and what we mustn’t allow is to let the abusers take [analgesic] drugs away from the people who really need them.”

    Of course, what that claim failed to recognize is that many of those that became addicted to those drugs – and who did go on to abuse them – began by following prescriptions for chronic pain! They were one and the same people. And where were the federal institutions that were supposed to protect Americans? Like the FDA, or the National Institute for Drug Abuse, or any one of a number of institutions? What happens is, they get coopted into that narrative. Instead of standing up and regulating as they’re supposed to do, they buy into it, and help perpetuate [the growing crisis].

    You also spoke to some ordinary people who have been affected by the crisis. One person who piqued my curiosity was Bre McUlty, who got hooked on drugs as a teenager. Will you tell us what she went through, and how she’s doing now?

    Bre’s an interesting character. There are lots of ways to be drawn into drug addiction, and Bre really got it through her family. Her father used a lot of drugs, and she grew up with her father (her mother wasn’t on the scene at that point). She lived at a house where drug dealers were coming by all the time, and people were doing drugs in front of her. (Actually, her first drug was alcohol. She was drinking as a teenager.) One day, somebody comes to her and says, “Hey, do you want to sell some drugs for us?” And she starts to sell drugs, makes a bit of money on the side. Eventually she ends up, by her late teens, dealing in heroin. And she was one of those people – there was an inevitability about it, I think. She grew up in that world, and she never saw anything outside of that world. She ends up pregnant as a teenager. She tries to break out from all of this, but can’t. And eventually she gets arrested. She winds up in prison, ironically, not for drug dealing but for threatening someone else who was dealing drugs and saying if she talks, she’ll burn her house down!

    I felt sympathetic to her, but when I got to that part in your book I thought, “Oh no. She should not have written those letters!”

    But she came out of prison. One of the things that’s really striking about Bre, is she’s a really a strong young woman. She has now settled elsewhere in the country. She left West Virginia, essentially because she felt there was no escaping drugs there. And she moved on to try and rebuild her life with her children. What is quite interesting about her is there’s a parallel story with a doctor in the same town [Rajan Masih] who also went to prison, only he went for mass prescribing opioids. Eventually he lost his license.

    They both came out of prison at about the same time, a couple of years ago, and I would say she is much more honest about her part in this crisis than he is. He’s still in denial. Although he’s got death on his hands – prosecutors said he prescribed to anybody and everybody – he blames that on his own addiction, rather than taking responsibility for his actions. (And this a man who had every chance; he’s a doctor, and quite a privileged person.) Bre – who never really had a chance in the beginning – is, I think, much more honest about taking responsibility for what she’s done in her life.

    You know, I’ve never taken heroin, mostly because I’ve always been so scared of it. And in light of what we now know about how pernicious opioid addiction is, I’m surprised that the crisis is still building. I agree with you about the culpability of companies and institutions. But is there any conceptual room for also talking about the behavior and responsibility of addicts who are keeping this crisis going?

    Yeah. “Do people have responsibility for the decisions they make?” Absolutely. What I would add is that while they have responsibility, once they get dragged into addiction – and not everybody does – but for those that do, it gets beyond their control. Addiction is a disease, and it’s a really, really hard thing to get out of. So, whatever the original causes of that, I don’t think it diminishes the need for some sincere understanding.

    The other thing I would say about some people who go down that path – and again, I don’t want to necessarily excuse – but if you come from certain backgrounds, if you live in certain communities, I think you’re far more likely to go down that path. There are some very interesting studies of this. One is by a pair of academics, Princeton professors Anne Case and Angus Deaton. And they look at who is most affected by this crisis. And by a long way, it is people who have no more than a high school education. And you can’t diminish those economic and social factors. Other studies that show that if your parents were using, or were addicted, then there’s a good chance that you are going to go down that path – like with Bre McUlty. And so, yes, perhaps younger people who do this – they [should know better]. But at the same time, if the drugs are widely available, and they’re living in difficult circumstances, I’m not without sympathy for them. People take up smoking in this day and age, and we all know what that does!

    Do you have a sense of where this is heading? Among the range of options that are being used to solve the problem, what do you think is most encouraging?

    Well I think there are different plusses and minuses. On the plus side, there’s been a huge change in attitudes, and a breakdown of stigma. A lot of that has got to do with people who have become addicted themselves, or are the relatives of people who died (particularly parents of children). They’ve gone out there, and they’ve tried to break down the stigma toward opioids and heroin addiction. I think that has had a huge impact, because it means people can talk about it, and go and seek help, without feeling judged. That is really important.

    There’s a view that access to medication-assisted treatment – which essentially involves low levels of opioids to help you stave off the worst effects of withdrawal – are probably the most effective for most people. Although the 12 steps work for some people, that involves total abstinence, which can be much harder. One of the things to recognize is that when most people try to end their addiction, they don’t do it on the first try. It takes repeated attempts. So, you need the resources, particularly in the poor parts of the country. When someone comes in and says “I want to do something [about my addiction],” you have to have the resources there for them. It’s no good saying, “Come back in six months.” So, there are more resources available, there is more awareness.

    But there are plenty of downsides. I think the rising death toll that you mentioned tells us something. I also think, when we look at how this began, with mass prescribing, [it’s troubling] that overall, prescribing hasn’t fallen like it needs to. At the height in 2012, there were 255 million prescriptions for opioids written that year. Last year, it was 192 million. That’s still incredibly high! And that mass prescribing, it puts the drugs out there. And so, if you’re not going to have a second wave [of addiction], you need to reduce the mass prescribing. Now there are people trying to do that, like the Centers for Disease Control. But there’s still a lot of resistance, particularly from the medical profession. Everybody I talk to about this, who has expert knowledge – they all say this has a very long tail. This is the worst drug epidemic in American history and it is not going to be over in five or possibly even ten years. It’s going to go on for quite a long time.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • In-School Services Offered To Students Impacted By Opioid Addiction

    In-School Services Offered To Students Impacted By Opioid Addiction

    More than 50 schools in Massachusetts offer in-school counseling services to students with parents who are battling opioid addiction. 

    Maddy Nadeau’s childhood was less than ideal. Her mother often could not care for her, leaving her older sister to do the job when she came home from elementary school. 

    Maddy is one of many children affected by a parent’s substance use disorder, according to NPR

    Luckily, her school is taking steps to help her overcome the trauma of such a childhood. In October, Congress allowed for $50 million annually for five years to be allotted to mental health services in schools for children affected by the opioid epidemic.

    The girls eventually entered a foster home, which led to an adoption. Sarah Nadeau, their adoptive mother, told NPR both girls struggled with depression and anxiety, as well as performance in school. Maddy had a hard time especially, as she was exposed to opioids while in utero.

    “That makes it very difficult for her brain to settle down enough to do more than one task at a time,” Nadeau told NPR.

    Counselors at schools such as Maddy’s are employed by Gosnold, which is a substance use disorder treatment provider in Massachusetts. According to NPR, more and more schools are starting to screen and treat students who are considered at risk for opioid use disorder, as well as offer mental health services for those who have been affected by it.

    “Schools have more kids who cannot access the learning environment,” Sharon Hoover, co-director of The National Center for School Mental Health at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, told NPR.


    According to Hoover, having such services in schools is proving effective.
”This is considered a preferable model of care,” she said. “The kids show up for treatment services because they’re not relying on a family member to take them somewhere in the community.”

    Though the services are new, data demonstrates counseling for at-risk students leads to fewer absences and better academic performance. Massachusetts schools using Gosnold counselors say their students are performing better academically and emotionally. Sarah Nadeau says this is the case for her girls.

    “Their day runs smoother. They can get out their anxiety while they’re in school instead of bottling it up, and then go back to class and continue learning,” she told NPR.

    Each participating school pays Gosnold for the counselors, and students’ insurance covers the individual sessions. If a student does not have insurance or it will not cover the cost, Gosnold absorbs that cost. Currently, more than 50 schools in Massachusetts offer such services. 

    “I wish that more schools offered it because the epidemic is everywhere,” says Sarah Nadeau. “For a lot of these kids, school is the only place that is stable. They get their lunch here, they get their education here, so why not give them their support while they’re here at the school?”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Michael Bloomberg To Spend $50 Million to Fight Addiction

    Michael Bloomberg To Spend $50 Million to Fight Addiction

    Michael Bloomberg wrote about his intentions to fight the opioid epidemic in the 10 states hit hardest by it in a recent op-ed. 

    Former New York City mayor and billionaire Michael Bloomberg announced that he will spend $50 million to fight the opioid epidemic, focusing on 10 states that are hardest-hit by drug overdoses. 

    “The opioid epidemic is a national health crisis of historic proportion. Yet the federal government is still not tackling it with the urgency it requires,” Bloomberg wrote in an op-ed for USA Today.  “What’s truly needed is a comprehensive strategy that includes the policy changes necessary to stem the epidemic and overcome barriers to treatment. We are not waiting around for the federal government to provide that strategy.”

    Grants will be made through Bloomberg Philanthropies, beginning with a three-year grant to Pennsylvania, which is expected to be about $10 million, according to The Washington Post. Pennsylvania has an overdose rate of about twice the national average but also has an innovative approach to fighting drug addiction, including an Opioid Command Center that meets weekly. The Bloomberg grant will help support that and similar programs aimed at reducing the overdose death rate. 

    “States have already been leading in ways Washington hasn’t, and foundations can offer resources and expertise that can help them accelerate their work now,” Bloomberg wrote. 

    Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said that his state was chosen because they’re already doing good work in fighting the opioid epidemic but still have lots of problems to confront. 

    “I think Bloomberg Philanthropies was looking for a commonwealth or a state that was actually doing something,” Wolf told The Washington Post. “What I would hope is we can use the $10 million as a really generous add-on to the kinds of things we’re already doing.”

    Bloomberg hopes to fund initiatives that can be replicated and help solve the overdose epidemic nationally. 

    “What we think we can do with $50 million is show the way in these 10 states,” Bloomberg said. “If they do things that we think make sense, then we will help fund it.”

    It was not immediately clear which other states would benefit from Bloomberg’s grant money. However, the philanthropist hopes that the funds will make a difference to families across the nation.

    “The pain, suffering, and death from opioid abuse is truly a national emergency. In just the time it took to read this commentary, another child has been removed from his or her parents’ care because of a parent’s opioid use,” he wrote. “Solving this crisis will not be easy. But states have a chance to show the federal government that bolder actions can save lives. And with so many communities crying out for leadership, there is no time to waste.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Melania Trump Discusses Opioid Epidemic

    Melania Trump Discusses Opioid Epidemic

    During her speech, Trump detailed startling statistics about the opioid epidemic but urged students to look beyond those numbers. 

    First Lady Melania Trump spoke with college students about the opioid epidemic last week, calling the current situation the “worst drug crisis in American history.”

    Trump appeared at a town hall meeting at Liberty University, a Christian university in Lynchburg, Virginia. She appeared on a panel hosted by former Fox News personality Eric Bolling, whose son died of an accidental drug overdose last year. 

    During the panel, Trump said she has seen how deeply the country has been affected by opioid abuse as she explores the issue as part of her “Be Best” campaign to emphasize emotional wellbeing. 

    “When I took on opioid abuse as one of the pillars of my initiative ‘Be Best,’ I did it with the goal of helping children of all ages. I have visited several hospitals and facilities that are dedicated to helping all who have been affected by this disease — including people who are addicted, babies born addicted and families coping with addiction of a loved one,” she said to the students at Liberty University, according to CNN. “What has struck me with each visit is how this epidemic has touched so many people — whether it is because of personal use, or that of family members, friends, coworkers or neighbors — opioid addiction is an illness that has truly taken hold of our country.” 

    During her speech, Trump detailed the statistics about the opioid epidemic but urged students to look beyond those numbers. 

    “I also believe you have the capacity to not think of this in terms of statistics, but to think of this as a human story and an opportunity to save lives,” she said.

    She added that everyone needs to be aware of the danger of opioids and of how to support someone who is struggling with substance use disorder. 

    “While you may never personally become addicted, the chances of you knowing someone who struggles with it are very high,” she said. “And if you, or someone you know needs help, you need to be brave enough to ask, or strong enough to stand with them as they fight through the disease.”

    Trump also told students that through her “Be Best” campaign she hopes to help kids realize that the actions they take now can affect them for years to come.

    “I saw it as an opportunity to speak with all of you as you enter a critical stage of your lives,” she told students, according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch. “The independence that comes with being a young adult is exciting but overwhelming… I know college is a time of independence. I am here to remind you some of those decisions, though they may seem minor at the time, could negatively impact you for the rest of your lives.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Opioid Court Aims To Prevent Overdose By Offering Treatment

    Opioid Court Aims To Prevent Overdose By Offering Treatment

    The Rochester-based opioid court offers treatment instead of jail time for minor drug-related offenses.

    A new court program in Rochester, New York aims to save lives by connecting people with opioid use disorder with treatment immediately, lessening their risk of overdose after spending a brief amount of time detoxing in jail. 

    “Their tolerance goes down from their short stay in the jail, and that’s when they use again and fatalities occur,” Monroe County Court Judge John DeMarco, who will oversee the new program, told WHAM.

    Rochester helped lead the national push for drug courts, which offer treatment instead of jail time for minor drug-related offenses. However, the drug court program in Monroe County has a months-long waiting list. Officials noticed that people with opioid use disorder weren’t getting the chance to participate in the program because they often relapsed after being released from jail following their arraignment. 

    To help prevent overdoses, the new program, called Opioid Stabilization Part (OSP), will evaluate people at the time of their arrest and help connect them with immediate treatment. opioid court — as it’s already being called — is meant to serve the people who are most at-risk for overdoses.

    “We have their attention. Having their attention creates maybe the only opportunity that those folks have to commit to get this thing turned around,” DeMarco said. 

    As part of the program, people showing signs of opioid use will be screened at Monroe County Jail the day of their arrest. Those who screen into the program will have their criminal cases put on hold. Instead of waiting for arraignment and being released on bail — oftentimes to return to the community to get high — participants will quickly be seen by a special judge and enrolled into treatment. From there, participants need to check in with the judge daily in person, if they are in an intensive out-patient program. 

    People who do not have insurance will be able to access treatment thanks to a $1.8 million federal grant for the program. 

    Law enforcement said that the people who will use opioid court are often more of a danger to themselves than to others. 

    “We recognize they’re at high risk,” said Monroe County Sheriff Todd Baxter. “That’s exactly what we’re trying to we[a]n out of the jail and put them where they belong, into a bed and treatment program.”

    District Attorney Sandra Doorley said the people in opioid court do not represent a danger to the community. In fact, she said that these people would normally be released from jail, just with less supervision than the opioid court program will provide. 

    “They’re usually given bail, so they’re released (into the community) anyway,” Doorley said. “At this point we’re not allowing violent felons to get into the program.”

    A similar program that launched in Buffalo, New York last year has not lost a single participant to overdose. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Dentist Wrote 200 Opioid Prescriptions For Five Patients In One Year

    Dentist Wrote 200 Opioid Prescriptions For Five Patients In One Year

    The dentist who wrote the opioid prescriptions claims state investigator were “telling lies” but he did not provide or clarify any additional details.

    A dentist in Tennessee has had his professional license revoked for reportedly writing approximately 200 prescriptions for opioid medications to just five patients, some of whom were never physically present in his office.

    A discipline report from the Tennessee Department of Health revealed that Michael R. Tittle, 64, who maintained a dental practice in the small town of Erwin, Tennessee, allegedly lacked the proper records to justify writing the prescriptions, which in one case totaled 71 prescriptions for 10 hydrocodone pills over the course of just six months.

    In a statement to the Tennessean, Tittle claimed that state investigators were “telling lies,” but he did not provide or clarify any additional details.

    In addition to the revocation of his license, Tittle was also assessed a civil penalty of $13,000, plus court costs not to exceed $3,000. These details, as well as the allegations against Dr. Tittle, were made public on November 15 as part of a monthly discipline report by the state Department of Health, which maintains public records on doctors and other health care professionals throughout the state. 

    According to the report, Tittle’s office came under investigation after the Department of Health received a complaint about his prescribing practices while on a five-year probation for multiple infection control violations. After reviewing his Controlled Substance Monitoring Database report, the Department requested 13 dental records; these were found to lack “a concise description and justification for the amount and frequency of controlled substances,” according to the report

    Prescription records for five patients were also highlighted in the report; in addition to the aforementioned patient, one patient is reported to have received 49 prescriptions for hydrocodone and 14 prescriptions for oxycodone, totaling 630 tablets, between October 2016 and September 2017.

    Another patient reportedly received 24 prescriptions, totaling 210 tablets, for more than a year after undergoing a root canal, while a third received two prescriptions for oxycodone and two for hydrocodone, all totaling 110 tablets, between August and November 2015, despite the fact that no documentation could confirm that the patient had ever set foot in Tittle’s office.

    The report also noted that Tittle admitted to having a pre-signed, blank prescription slip in his office that had been “copied onto security paper to generate additional pre-signed prescription slips.”

    To settle the case, Tittle agreed to the revocation of his Tennessee dental license as well as $1,000 in civil penalties for each of the 13 records reviewed by the Department of Health and the “actual and reasonable costs” of prosecuting the case. The findings were also reported to the National Practitioner Data Bank.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Fighting the Drug War in Budget Motels and Prisons

    Fighting the Drug War in Budget Motels and Prisons

    On paper, Nicole’s job is to deliver opioid overdose prevention supplies and make referrals, but in reality, she is a health care worker, mental health counselor, legal advisor, social worker, confidant and more.

    Every morning Nicole Reynolds sits down at her kitchen table with a steaming cup of coffee in one hand and a phone in the other — she is looking at mugshots.

    Scrolling through bleary-eyed photos of last night’s arrestees, she pauses at familiar faces and jots down the names. She checks missed messages on her phone and sometimes combs through the obituaries.

    As an outreach worker with the North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition (NCHRC), Nicole offers harm reduction services to people who use drugs problematically in Wake and Johnston counties. Through a grant from the Aetna Foundation, she provides free overdose prevention resources and referrals to social services such as housing, medical care, and drug detox.

    It is not easy keeping track of such a transient population; many of her regular participants hang out at budget motels, but frequent police raids scatter them, leaving Nicole to figure out where they landed. So each morning she makes a list:

    Who was arrested last night?
    Who became homeless?
    Who died?

    Rural Outreach: Hope and Risk

    One rainy November afternoon, I join Nicole as she visits her program participants in Johnston County. The 32-year-old is high energy today, exuding the caffeinated vigor of someone who didn’t sleep well and is trying to make up for it.

    “Last night the police raided the hotel where I was doing HIV and hepatitis C testing,” she explains. “I got home late.”

    She winds her long, red dreadlocks absently on her head before letting them fall back to her waist. I wonder, not for the first time, how her small frame holds up the weight of all that hair; she is tiny enough to disappear behind a telephone pole.

    We drive 30 minutes to Johnston County, a rural district rife with dichotomies — fast food chains loom next to empty crop fields and strip club advertisements glitter beside “Jesus Saves” billboards. I ask Nicole to name the towns we pass through, but even she isn’t certain since identical Bojangle’s frame the outskirts of each one. Even the budget motels where we drop off naloxone look alike. Whatever their original colors, each moldy building is now stained with highway exhaust.

    As we drive up to homes and motels, Nicole’s phone rings incessantly. People call for supplies. They call for referrals to drug detox and treatment. They call to ask how to bail a friend out of jail. They call to give updates on their abscess wounds. They call in a panic because someone has nodded off after taking drugs and everyone is afraid to call 911. They call for advice on leaving a violent boyfriend. They call to be tested for HIV. They call to report they just lost their homes. They call because they are lonely and just want to talk…

    On paper, Nicole’s job is to deliver overdose prevention supplies and make referrals to social services. But in reality, she is a health care worker, a mental health counselor, a legal advisor, a social worker, a confidant, and a thousand other job descriptions whose collective weight threatens to crush her.

    “I can’t be everything to everybody,” she tells me, sighing.

    She tries to set boundaries: she doesn’t carry cash, since she is frequently asked for money; she turns off her work phone during non-work hours to avoid the onslaught of calls; she reminds participants that she cannot offer legal advice or perform medical procedures. (But still they ask.)

    As we drive, Nicole frets over her latest dilemma. One of her participants, who recently gave birth, was beaten so badly by her boyfriend that her jawbone shattered. She has asked Nicole to watch her newborn while she gets her jaw wired shut at the hospital.

    “I know I should say no,” Nicole says. She lapses into a rare silence. “But she has no one else.”

    Nicole knows all too well how the stigma of problematic drug use can make someone feel alone. Years ago, she used and sold illicit drugs, even living at some of the hotels we visited. Today, she wears new life on her head—literally. She hasn’t cut her hair since she entered long-term recovery and now the scarlet dreadlocks are long enough to sit on.

    The ability to find and relate to people struggling with chaotic drug use is one of the blessings and curses of hiring current or former drug users as outreach workers. Nicole is uniquely qualified for this job. But she is also uniquely vulnerable to burn-out. It’s hard to say no when you remember how badly you once needed help. And in addition to shouldering heavy workloads and emotional burden, outreach workers are often the most underpaid staff at any organization.

    I marvel at how Nicole remains upbeat amidst the flood of crisis calls from her participants. Even as we visit homes and hotels, the same questions roil her mind:

    Who was arrested last night?
    Who became homeless?
    Who died?

    These questions are heavily intertwined. For opioid users in particular, any period of abstinence drastically increases the risk of overdose death. In fact, every time an opioid user spends a few days in jail without drugs, their risk of overdose spikes to 40 times that of the general population once they get out.

    The War on Drugs: Overdose and Desperation

    Nicole spends her mornings looking at mugshots for a reason. It is difficult for her to know when participants will be released from jail, but once they are, the race is on to find them before the Grim Reaper does.

    The arrest of a high-level drug seller can usher in even bigger problems. When one dealer is taken off the street, users who rely on a steady supply of drugs to ward off withdrawal symptoms are driven to desperation: some will buy drugs from riskier, unknown sources; some will engage in more sex work or petty crime than usual to pay the higher prices caused by reduced supply; some will fall prey to contaminated batches of drugs (as existing supplies are mixed with other substances to spread them over a larger customer base). Overdose deaths usually rise — at least for a few days — until a new dealer takes over, supply normalizes, and business as usual resumes.

    Truly, a single day spent learning supply and demand from Nicole Reynolds can expose the madness of the war on drugs.

    * * *

    Our last stop of the day is the bus station in Raleigh, North Carolina. As we exit the car, Nicole greets a tall, bearded man in a red shirt who has recently been let out of jail. Nicole is pleased that he contacted her during this risky post-release period. She gives him some supplies and advises him to take it slow if he uses drugs again.

    But the next day, the man in the red shirt is dead.

    After reading the news in a text from Nicole, I call to ask how she is doing.

    “I don’t know,” she says. “Maybe if I had followed-up with him this morning he wouldn’t have overdosed…” She catches herself. “No. It’s not my fault,” she adds.

    “Of course not,” I tell her. “We try to help, but most of this is out of our hands.”

    As we hang up, I sigh. Forty times more likely to die after leaving jail. Who can beat those odds?

    I picture Nicole at her kitchen the table this morning, coffee mug in one hand, scrolling through mugshots.

    Who was arrested last night?
    Who became homeless?
    Who died?

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Opioids, Suicide Push Life Expectancy Down Again In The US

    Opioids, Suicide Push Life Expectancy Down Again In The US

    This is the “longest sustained decline” in life expectancy in a century.

    The life expectancy of Americans has declined for the third year in a row, according to 2016-2017 data.

    Rising drug overdose deaths and suicide are to blame, says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

    As the Washington Post stated, this marks the “longest sustained decline” in life expectancy in a century, a trend not seen in the U.S. since 1915-1918, a period which included World War I and a flu pandemic.

    A person born in 2017 can expect to live 78.6 years in the U.S., according to the new data. This marks a decrease of 0.1 year from 2016.

    Females continue to outlive men. From 2016-2017, the life expectancy of American women did not change (81.1 years), while men’s life expectancy declined from 76.2 to 76.1 years.

    Drug overdose deaths hit a record high in 2017 at 70,237, the CDC confirmed—a 9.6% increase from 2016. The demographics most affected were men, and people between the ages of 25-54.

    West Virginia saw the highest rates of drug overdose deaths (57.8 per 100,000), with Ohio, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. trailing behind. Meanwhile, Texas, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska had the lowest rates, with about 10 or fewer drug overdose deaths per 100,000.

    Deaths from fentanyl and its analogs, and similar drugs, increased by 45%, while heroin-related deaths remained constant.

    Prescription painkiller-related deaths also did not increase in 2017, the Washington Post noted. This may be the result of efforts to address over-prescribing through prescription drug monitoring programs and awareness initiatives, said Robert Anderson, chief of the mortality statistics branch at the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.

    Efforts to increase access to naloxone, the drug that reverses opioid overdose, may have helped mitigate some death rates as well.

    The rate of suicide, the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S., increased by 3.7% in 2017. Female suicides increased at a higher rate than male suicides (53% vs. 26%), however, men still die in greater numbers by suicide each year.

    The statistics paint a grim picture of drug and mental health problems in the U.S..

    “Life expectancy gives us a snapshot of the nation’s overall health and these sobering statistics are a wakeup call that we are losing too many Americans, too early and too often, to conditions that are preventable,” said CDC director Dr. Robert Redfield.

    “We must all work together to reverse this trend and help ensure that all Americans live longer and healthier.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • West African Clinic Offers Free Methadone, Clean Needles & More

    West African Clinic Offers Free Methadone, Clean Needles & More

    The goal of Senegal’s free program is not only to rehabilitate, but also to reduce the spread of HIV and AIDS among drug users.

    A clinic in West Africa is doing its part to mitigate the region’s opioid crisis.

    People line up at the Center for the Integrated Management of Addictions (known locally as CEPIAD) in Senegal to receive a daily dose of methadone and counseling. Some travel hours for treatment.

    “You get here, you have your methadone and you are not thinking about taking drugs. You are thinking about moving your life forwards,” says Moustapha Mbodj, who is in recovery from more than 30 years of heroin use.

    A new CNN report highlights CEPIAD’s efforts. Established by the Senegalese government in 2014, the clinic is the first in West Africa to provide free opioid substitution treatment. CEPIAD offers methadone, clean syringes and condoms, as well as skills workshops and help with reintegrating into family networks, according to CNN. It has helped more than 700 people since it opened.

    The goal of the free program is not only to rehabilitate drug users, but to reduce the spread of HIV and AIDS among drug users. Over 10% of injecting drug users in Senegal live with HIV, according to United Nations estimates. Among the general population, this number is less than 1%.

    An estimated 1,300 injecting drug users were counted in Dakar (Senegal’s capital) in 2011, according to a voluntary survey by the French National Agency for Research on AIDS.

    In response to the survey, Senegal’s government turned to a harm reduction approach. In a two-year period, public health workers distributed 18,614 clean syringes and 17,564 condoms to the public at no cost.

    The need for such services is rising.

    Senegal is among a handful of African nations that offer this type of free service. According to a 2017 report, out of 37 African nations reporting drug use data to the UN, just eight offer harm reduction approaches, including Senegal, Tanzania, Kenya and Mauritius.

    Pierre Lapaque, a representative with the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) for West and Central Africa, explained that the market for drugs is growing in a region that previously served only as a transit point for drug traffickers.

    Lapaque says traffickers used a “smart approach” to introduce drugs to a “region where there was absolutely no market ten years ago.”

    “Often what the traffickers are doing is they are paying their support staff not only in cash but in drugs,” said Lapaque.

    View the original article at thefix.com