Should Heroin Addicts Get Overdose Drug?

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Should Heroin Addicts Get Overdose Drug?
400 Deaths Nationwide Blamed On Tainted Heroin
By MARYCLAIRE DALE, AP

PHILADELPHIA (July 29) - In the wake of more than 400 deaths nationwide from heroin laced with the painkiller fentanyl, some needle exchange programs are giving addicts prescriptions for a drug to keep on hand to halt an overdose.




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At least 150 fentanyl deaths have been recorded in the Philadelphia area, 130 in Chicago and 130 in Detroit.


The antidote - naloxone, which is sold under the brand name Narcan - can save the life of someone who might not call 911 for fear of prosecution, treatment providers say.

Even if a user does call, help can arrive too late.

"If people have to rely on paramedics, more often than not, the overdose is going to be fatal, just because of the amount of time for people to get there," said Casey Cook, executive director of Prevention Point Philadelphia, a nonprofit that runs the city's needle exchange program. The group recently began distributing naloxone prescriptions through a physician.

But others say naloxone is best administered by trained paramedics and that the prescription approach might appear to condone drug use.

"We don't want to send the message out that there is a safe way to use heroin," said Jennifer DeVallance, a spokeswoman for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, which sponsored a symposium Friday on the fentanyl problem in Philadelphia.

Fentanyl - an opiate used legally in anesthesia and for some cancer patients - is cheaper than heroin and 80 times more potent than morphine. That makes it an appealing additive for heroin distributors.

At least 150 fentanyl deaths have been recorded in the Philadelphia area, 130 in Chicago and 130 in Detroit.

John P. Walters, the director of the White House drug policy office, said investigators hope to learn whether a clandestine laboratory raided in Mexico last month was the source of much of the illegal fentanyl reaching the United States.

"We think and we hope that the production site taken down in Mexico was the (main) site," Walters said.

Fentanyl can lead to respiratory failure so quickly that one addict in Philadelphia apparently died even before he finished shooting up. A syringe with some heroin still in it was in his arm when paramedics found his body, according to Capt. Richard Bossert of Philadelphia's Emergency Medical Services Administration.

The case underscores the difficulty the medical community has faced in responding to the fentanyl crisis. Bossert said his unit has answered dozens of calls but has saved only two people.

"In other years, we were getting them (non-fentanyl heroin overdoses) to the hospital and they survived," Bossert said.


7/29/2006 13:02:30 EDT


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks

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The works exchange there has been trying to get it for at least a few months now. I don't see why naloxone hasn't been made available a long time ago. Without a doubt, quite a few lives would have been saved.
 
Its an RX drug, it should be OTC. The DEA shouldn't even be commenting, it isn't scheduled, that should be up to the FDA.
 
"We don't want to send the message out that there is a safe way to use heroin," said Jennifer DeVallance, a spokeswoman for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, which sponsored a symposium Friday on the fentanyl problem in Philadelphia.

Well isn't that great. Even if there is a safe way to do it we don't want them doing it, its the principle. I mean who cares that human beings lives are involved.
 
This is stupid, they are refusing easy access to a potentially LIFE SAVING drug. Dumb government should get their heads out of their metaphoric asses.
 
Coincidentally, I live in Philadelphia however I do not use heroin anymore. I think this is just common sense. When I OD'ed, the paramedics had to be sent to my house to administer the Narcan. Eliminate the middle-man.
 
They dispense naloxone to everyone who is prescribed methadone or buprenorphine at my clinic here in London and I know for a fact that it has saved several lives in the last few months.

There is absolutely no evidence that dispensing naloxone encourages people to use heroin.

BTW the naloxone they give us comes in these ready made glass syringes that anyone could easily use (naloxone can be given through an IM injection in the muscle).
 
twgburst said:
Its an RX drug, it should be OTC. The DEA shouldn't even be commenting, it isn't scheduled, that should be up to the FDA.


indeed. its inhumane to think otherwise. Should cancer victims be allowed chemotherapy or should we let them take their cancer ridden genes to the grave? Its sick to disregard human life in such a fashion.
 
It would help out so many people and cause less deaths obviously if they handed out that drug. I don't see the issue on why not to?
 
If less people started dying from heroin, then the illusion of it being so dangerous would disapear. The only thing the Anti-drug people have going for them is propaganda, and #'s that don't really mean anything, and if those #'s drop dramatically, people will realize heroin isn't as dangerous as they say, and that you really can use heroin with little chance of dying. At least thats what I think, they want people to die, its good PR.
 
Sadly enough out of those 150 deaths in Philadelphia, 2 of them were in my area in the suburbs that I know of for sure. A few of my friends were very close to them as well, it sucks. Every time I've been in the city though, the dealers tell you what stamp they are selling which has the fent in it. I'm guessing not everyone has been so lucky.
 
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