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Jul-07-2015 16:11printcomments

CDC Says Oregon is in 'Top 10' Opioids and Heroin Centers of Abuse

Between 2002 and 2013, the rate of heroin-related overdose deaths nearly quadrupled. NO STATE had a decrease in the heroin death rate.

heroin sucks

(ATLANTA, Georgia) - Heroin use has increased across the US among men and women, most age groups, and all income levels.

Some of the greatest increases occurred in demographic groups with historically low rates of heroin use: women, the privately insured, and people with higher incomes. Not only are people using heroin, they are also abusing multiple other substances, especially cocaine and prescription opioid painkillers.

As heroin use has increased, so have heroin-related overdose deaths.

Between 2002 and 2013, the rate of heroin-related overdose deaths nearly quadrupled, and more than 8,200 people died in 2013.

Heroin deaths increased sharply in many states, according to a report of death certificate data from 28 states published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in this week’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

Despite these findings, still more than twice as many people died from prescription opioid overdoses as died from heroin in these states in 2012.

Though not directly addressed by this study, two things appear to be driving the increase in heroin overdoses: (1) widespread prescription opioid exposure and increasing rates of opioid addiction; and (2) increased heroin supply. While the majority of prescription opioid users do not become heroin users, previous research found that approximately 3 out of 4 new heroin users report having abused prescription opioids prior to using heroin.

This relationship between prescription opioid abuse and heroin is not surprising; heroin is an opioid, and both drugs act on the same receptors in the brain to produce similar effects. Heroin often costs less than prescription opioids and is increasingly available.

“Reducing inappropriate opioid prescribing remains a crucial public health strategy to address both prescription opioid and heroin overdoses,” said CDC Director Tom Frieden, M.D., M.P.H.

“Addressing prescription opioid abuse by changing prescribing is likely to prevent heroin use in the long term.”

The Oct 2014 study examined changes in heroin and prescription opioid death rates in 28 states between 2010 and 2012. The 28 states represented 56 percent of the U.S. population (Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia, and Washington).

Key Findings:

  • From 2010-2012, the overall heroin death rate across the 28 states doubled.
  • The sharp heroin overdose increase extends the trend observed in the 2011 national mortality data.
  • Of the 18 states with reliable heroin overdose death rates examined individually in this study, 15 had statistically significant increases in heroin death rates. No state had a decrease in the heroin death rate.
  • The increases in state heroin death rates from 2010-2012 were associated with increases in prescription opioid death rates.

"This study is another reminder of the seriousness of the prescription opioid overdose epidemic and the connection to heroin overdoses,” said Grant Baldwin, Ph.D, M.P.H, Director, Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention.

"CDC and other federal agencies are working to promote a smart, coordinated approach to reduce inappropriate prescribing and help people addicted to these drugs."

While addressing prescribing is necessary to prevent opioid and heroin overdoses, it is important to help those already addicted to prescription opioids and heroin.

Improving access to medication-assisted treatment is important. Increased use of naloxone, a prescription drug that can reverse an opioid or heroin overdose if administered in time, might also help save lives.

States play a central role in prevention, treatment, and recovery efforts for this growing epidemic.

States can:

  • Address the strongest risk factor for heroin addiction: addiction to prescription opioid painkillers.
  • Increase access to substance abuse treatment services, including Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT), for opioid addiction.
  • Expand access to and training for administering naloxone to reduce opioid overdose deaths.
  • Ensure that people have access to integrated prevention services, including access to sterile injection equipment from a reliable source, as allowed by local policy.
  • Help local jurisdictions to put these effective practices to work in communities where drug addiction is common.

CDC's Injury Center works to protect the safety of everyone, every day. For more information about prescription drug overdoses, please visit www.cdc.gov/homeandrecreationalsafety/overdose.

Overdose Toolkit: http://store.samhsa.gov/shin/content//SMA14-4742/Overdose_Toolkit.pdf

Treatment Locator: http://findtreatment.samhsa.gov/

Want to learn more? www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/heroin

Source: Woloshin Communications; CDC; U.S. Department of Health & Human Services

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Jake Hagan July 9, 2015 1:55 pm (Pacific time)

To really understand the heroin epidemic, we have to go back to (at least) the Viet Nam war. I say at least because we could go back furture, but this is a good place to recognize a sharp escalation in multiple drug use by middle and upper class white anglo-saxon protestents. I know this to be true because I am a "child of the sixties" and a Viet Nam veteran (1968-69). This was certainly a turning point for the slow erosion of the family unit and the evidence is indisputable. I personally self-medicated for about five years until I walked into a VA Hospital. Although the help was weak in 1974, I still consider myself one of the lucky ones. The "Golden Triangle" of Laos, Cambodia, and Viet Nam was just what the doctor ordered when it came to backing the first seditious move since the creation of the Federal Reserve Bank in 1913. Was there a plan to addict Europe, America, et al or was the plan to prop up the biggest pyramid scheme in the history of the Galactic Cosmos? My answer is you betch'a! to both. The new "catch phrases" of the 1970's, 80's, and 90's was WALL STREET and INVESTMENT BANKING. Hot Dang! We're off to the races!! IRA's, 401k's, Paine-Weber, Crosby,Stills, and Nash, The Marks Brothers,...it didn't matter. Just throw your money in there; add a little water and watch it grow!! Of course the secret ingredient was the billions of dollars the investment bankers were laundrying from the heroin trade. The high preist of money was none other than Goldman Sachs. But there was a problem. Southeast Asian countries became as greedy as the investment bankers. Enter Afganistan and the Russian debacle and we have the number one source of heroin in the world. Of course the shadow government had to create a few false flags to convence the American public to invade Afganistan, but that was easy. All they had to do was interupt "Who's the Boss" or "Happy Days" re-runs a few times with "Breaking News" and Americans were ready to grab their .45's and join up! Now the Stock Market is really rolling to the tune of 300 billion dollars of illegal heroin money per year being infused into the scheme. I recall calling a bank and asking if I could refinace our home and wondering how to get an appraisal. After being asked for my address the lady at the bank said that I was appraised at seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars. I could probably get more if I could prove I was employed. Which I wasn't. Man there was Feddie Mac, and Annie Mae and FHA and VA and dozen more loans and everyone was selling the paper to who? Oh yeah...me and you through our beloved investment bankers especially Goldman Sachs. Then, about 2007 a crazy thing happened. These guys called "Taliban" show up and take over the Government of Afganistan and... (are you ready for this?) burn and destroy all the Poppy fields in Afganistan. UH!OH! Time for Goldman Sachs and all the other crooks on Wall Street to take the profits. The Stock Market Crash of 2008 and all that paper was only good for starting fires. But not to worry...the Poppy fields have been restored and are producing more Heroin now than ever before and with the complete erosion of the American family, more and more parents are finding their kids in emergency rooms or morgues. The pyramid scheme is cranking up again and fueled by the lives of someone you know. This is purely my personal opinion based on actually doing my own research instead if listening to the talking heads on the main stream media.

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