Tag: Philadelphia

  • Pandemic Presents New Hurdles, and Hope, for People Struggling with Addiction

    “There’s social distancing — to a limit…I think when someone’s life is in jeopardy, they’re worth saving. You just can’t watch people die.”

    Before Philadelphia shut down to slow the spread of the coronavirus, Ed had a routine: most mornings he would head to a nearby McDonald’s to brush his teeth, wash his face and — when he had the money — buy a cup of coffee. He would bounce between homeless shelters and try to get a shower. But since businesses closed and many shelters stopped taking new admissions, Ed has been mostly shut off from that routine.

    He’s still living on the streets.

    “I’ll be honest, I don’t really sleep too much,” said Ed, who’s 51 and struggling with addiction. “Every four or five days I get a couple hours.”

    KHN agreed not to use his last name because he uses illegal drugs.

    Philadelphia has the highest overdose rate of any big city in America — in 2019, more than three people a day died of drug overdoses there, on average. Before the coronavirus began spreading across the United States, the opioid overdose epidemic was the biggest health crisis on the minds of many city officials and public health experts. The coronavirus pandemic has largely eclipsed the conversation around the opioid crisis. But the crisis still rages on despite business closures, the cancellation of in-person treatment appointments and the strain on many addiction resources in the city.

    When his usual shelter wasn’t an option anymore, Ed tried to get into residential drug treatment. He figured that would be a good way to try to get back on his feet and, if nothing else, get a few good nights of rest. But he had contracted pinkeye, a symptom thought to be associated with the virus that leads to COVID-19, so the evaluation center didn’t want to place him in an inpatient facility until he’d gotten the pinkeye checked out. But he couldn’t see a doctor because he didn’t have a phone for a telehealth appointment.

    “I got myself stuck, and I’m trying to pull everything back together before it totally blows up,” he said.

    Rosalind Pichardo wants to help people in Ed’s situation. Before the pandemic, Pichardo would hit the streets of her neighborhood, Kensington, which has the highest drug overdose rate in Philadelphia. She’d head out with a bag full of snack bars, cookies and Narcan, the opioid overdose reversal drug.

    She’d hand Narcan out to people using drugs, and people selling drugs — anyone who wanted it. Pichardo started her own organization, Operation Save Our City, which initially set out to work with survivors of gun violence in the neighborhood. When she realized that overdoses were killing people too, she began getting more involved with the harm reduction movement and started handing out Narcan through the city’s syringe exchange.

    When Pennsylvania’s stay-at-home order went into effect, Pichardo and others worried that more people might start using drugs alone, and that fewer first responders would be patrolling the streets or nearby and able to revive them if they overdosed.

    So, Pichardo and other harm reduction activists gave out even more Narcan. A representative for Prevention Point Philadelphia, the group that operates a large syringe exchange program in the city, said that during the first month of the city’s stay-at-home order, they handed out almost twice as much Narcan as usual.

    After the lockdowns and social distancing began, Pichardo worried that more people would be using drugs alone, leading to more overdoses. But Philadelphia’s fatal overdose rate during the pandemic remains about the same as it was this time last year. Pichardo said she thinks that’s evidence that flooding the streets with Narcan is working — that people are continuing to use drugs, and maybe even using more drugs, but that users are utilizing Narcan more often and administering it to one another.

    That is the hope. But Pichardo said users don’t always have a buddy to keep watch, and during the pandemic first responders have seemed much more hesitant to intervene. For example, she recently administered Narcan to three people in Kensington who overdosed near a subway station, while two police officers stood by and watched. Before the pandemic, they would often be right there with her, helping.

    To reverse the overdoses, Pichardo crouched over the people who she said had started turning blue as their oxygen levels dropped. She injected the Narcan into their noses, using a disposable plastic applicator. Normally, she would perform rescue breathing, too, but since the pandemic began she has started carrying an Ambu bag, which pumps air into a person’s lungs and avoids mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Among the three people, she said, it took six doses of Narcan to revive them. The police officers didn’t step in to help but did toss several overdose-reversal doses toward Pichardo as she worked.

    “I don’t expect ’em to give ’em rescue breaths if they don’t want to, but at least administer the lifesaving drug,” Pichardo said.

    In her work as a volunteer, she has reversed almost 400 overdoses, she estimated.

    “There’s social distancing — to a limit,” Pichardo said, “I think when someone’s life is in jeopardy, they’re worth saving. You just can’t watch people die.”

    Even before Philadelphia officially issued its stay-at-home order, city police announced they would stop making low-level arrests, including for narcotics. The idea was to reduce contact overall, help keep the jail population low and reduce the risk of the virus getting passed around inside. But Pichardo and other community activists said the decreased law enforcement emboldened drug dealers in the Kensington neighborhood, where open-air drug sales and use are common.

    “You can tell they have everything down pat, from the lookout to the corner boys to the one actually holding the product — the one holding the product’s got some good PPE gear,” said Pichardo.

    More dealers working openly on the street has led to more fights over territory, she added, which in turn has meant more violence. While overall crime in Philadelphia and other major cities has declined during the pandemic, gun violence has spiked.

    Police resumed arrests at the beginning of May.

    Now when she goes out to offer relief and hand out Narcan, Pichardo packs a few extra things in her bag of supplies: face masks, gloves and gun locks.

    “It’s like the survival kit of the ’hood,” she said.

    For those struggling with addiction who are ready to start recovery, newly relaxed federal restrictions have made it easier to get medications that curb opioid cravings and stem withdrawal. Several efforts are underway among Philadelphia-based public health groups and criminal justice advocacy organizations to give cellphones to people who are homeless or coming out of jail, so they can make a telehealth appointment and get quicker access to a prescription for those medicines.

    During the pandemic, people taking medication-assisted treatment can renew their prescription every month instead of every week, which helps decrease trips to the pharmacy. It is too soon to know if more people are taking advantage of the new rules, and accessing medication-assisted treatment via telehealth, but if that turns out to be the case, many addiction medicine specialists argue the new rules should become permanent, even after the pandemic ends.

    “If we find that these relaxed restrictions are bringing more people to the table, that presents enormous ethical questions about whether or not the DEA should reinstate these restrictive policies that they had going in the first place,” said Dr. Ben Cocchiaro, a physician who treats people with substance-use disorder.

    Cocchiaro said the whole point of addiction treatment is to facilitate help as soon as someone is ready for it. He hopes if access to recovery can be made simpler during a pandemic, it can remain that way afterward.

    This story is part of a partnership that includes WHYY, NPR and Kaiser Health News.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Feds Sue To Stop Safe Injection Site In Philadelphia

    Feds Sue To Stop Safe Injection Site In Philadelphia

    Federal authorities are invoking a “crack house statute” from the ’80s in their attempt to stop the opening of the site.

    Federal authorities in Philadelphia are suing to stop the opening of a safe injection site in the city. 

    “These folks have good intentions and they’re trying their best to combat the opioid epidemic,” William McSwain, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, told NPR. “But this step of opening an injection site crosses the line.”

    McSwain is suing to stop Safehouse, a nonprofit, from opening a supervised injection site. The organization has said that it has support of city officials and plans to open the site this year. However, McSwain said that the site—where people would bring drugs to inject under medical supervision—is illegal.  

    “If Safehouse or others want to open this type of site, they need to steer their efforts to get the law changed,” he said. 

    The federal authorities cite a portion of the Controlled Substances Act that was written during the 1980s when people were concerned about the crack epidemic. The so-called crack house statute makes it illegal to operate a place to make, store, distribute or use illegal drugs. The law was originally written to prosecute people operating crack houses, but authorities have used it in other circumstances, said Alex Kreit, a law professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego and a drug policy specialist. 

    However, Kreit noted that this is the first time authorities will try to use the law against a safe injection site. 

    “It is completely untested in terms of how federal law will apply to safe injection sites,” he said. “People will be watching this very closely—particularly in other cities that have expressed their intention of starting a safe injection site.”

    Although Philadelphia has been at the forefront of the supervised injection site debate, other cities from around the country are considering similar measures. There are no safe injection sites in the U.S., but data from Canada and other countries indicate that such facilities can help stop the spread of disease and reduce overdose deaths because medical professionals are on hand.

    Proponents also argue that the sites will be able to connect drug users with resources including treatment. 

    Despite this, McSwain said in a letter to Safehouse that the law “makes no exception for entities, such as Safehouse, who claim a benevolent purpose.”

    Safehouse’s vice president and attorney Ronda Goldfein said that she’s confident that a federal judge will recognize that the site is not the intended target of the statute. 

    “We have a disagreement on the analysis and intention of the law. We don’t think it was intended to prevent activities such as this, and perhaps it will take a court’s ruling to move the issue forward.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Philadelphia Clears Out Another "Heroin Camp" As Winter Hits City

    Philadelphia Clears Out Another "Heroin Camp" As Winter Hits City

    It’s the third homeless camping spot cleared out in the Kensington neighborhood in recent months.

    Last week, police in Philadelphia shut down another of the city’s so-called heroin encampments, forcing the area’s homeless from under a railroad bridge and urging them into a local shelter. 

    It’s the third homeless camping spot cleared out in the Kensington neighborhood in recent months, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the forced relocation comes just as the city’s settling in for the cold with the first snowfall of the season. 

    Residents at the encampment were warned last month that they’d need to move, but a few dozen were still on scene Thursday when police, outreach workers and homeless advocates showed up to supervise the relocation. 

    Close to 40 people agreed to enter the low-barrier shelter, a place where residents don’t have a strict curfew keeping them inside at night and they aren’t required to stop using drugs, the newspaper reported. 

    In some parts of the city, the opioid-addicted homeless population has surged in recent months, the Inquirer wrote in September. In Kensington, the number of people living on the street more than doubled in the course of a year, bumping up from 271 in 2017 to 703 a year later, authorities said. 

    “We certainly recognize that things have gotten worse, that the neighborhood is under siege,” Brian Abernathy, the city’s first deputy managing director, told the Inquirer. “People are suffering. We have to do better, and we’re exploring new approaches. We expect to have something soon.”

    The uptick in Kensington homelessness comes even as homelessness in the rest of the city appears to be declining. City officials accounted for 1,355 people living on the street in August of this year, an increase from the 983 counted at the same time last year. 

    The increase in Kensington alone could account for all of that, and officials said the uptick isn’t simply the result of displacement from other areas of the city. 

    “It’s not just a reshuffling,” said Liz Hersh, the city’s Office of Homeless Services director. “It’s an influx.”

    Now, with the clearing of the Frankford camp under the tracks, there’s only one big homeless hotspot left in the neighborhood—the Emerald Street encampment.   

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Philadelphia Grapples With Closing Heroin Camps

    Philadelphia Grapples With Closing Heroin Camps

    The city has promised to move people who are currently encamped in the area into drug treatment and permanent housing.

    City officials and charitable groups in Philadelphia are grappling with how best to help people as the city moves to dismantle tent cities that are overrun with opioid abuse.

    City officials hope to have four encampments closed by the end of May, and are giving camp residents priority access to housing and drug treatment. 

    “What I predict is going to happen? This bridge will be cleaned out, Tulip [encampment] will be cleaned out, they’ll go to the other bridges, they’ll go in abandoned buildings,” Nicole Bixler, a social worker, said earlier this month. “The community will be broken up, and they’ll die alone, and no one will know until we smell them in the summertime.”

    The camps are home to about 180 people, many of whom inject opioids. Last year, Philadelphia cleaned out its largest heroin encampment, which had become so well-known that it was featured on an episode of The Dr. Oz Show. The camp was home to people with addiction, many of whom moved on to other areas of the city when the camp was cleared out. 

    This time, the city has promised to move people who are currently encamped in the Kensington area of the city into drug treatment and permanent housing. Each day, city workers visit the camps to try to get people into area shelters or into treatment. In the past two weeks 39 people have entered treatment, more than in the past six months, according to the Philly Inquirer.  

    “Everybody wants it to work,” said City Councilwoman Maria Quinones-Sanchez, whose district has three of the encampments and two shelters that people are being relocated to. “This is the closest we’ve gotten to breaking down barriers on access to housing and treatment. It shouldn’t have taken this long, but we’re there.” 

    Still, some residents of the camp are frustrated that it took so long for the city to come up with a viable solution to the housing and drug crisis. 

    “Why wait until now to do this?” said Ryan Forrest, 28, who has lived in one of the camps for seven months. “Why did they let so many people get frostbite during the winter?”

    Forrest wasn’t sure what he was going to do when the camps were cleared, until he realized that he was on the city’s list of camp residents who were being prioritized for treatment and housing. 

    “I was going to stay until the end. I didn’t really have a plan,” he said. “But they were pushing me to the shelter, and they told me I was on the list, and I went up there.”

    People who work closely with the homeless population that lives in the camps are cautiously optimistic that reluctant residents like Forrest may get help with the new programming. 

    “I’m scared for what may happen,” said Tim Sheahan, an outreach worker with the city’s Department of Behavioral and Intellectual Disability Services. “We’ve gotten as close to treatment on demand as possible.”

    View the original article at thefix.com