Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

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de officiis
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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by de officiis » Mon Jul 17, 2017 6:23 pm

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'It's raining needles': Drug crisis creates pollution threat
LOWELL, Mass. — They hide in weeds along hiking trails and in playground grass. They wash into rivers and float downstream to land on beaches. They pepper baseball dugouts, sidewalks and streets. Syringes left by drug users amid the heroin crisis are turning up everywhere.

In Portland, Maine, officials have collected more than 700 needles so far this year, putting them on track to handily exceed the nearly 900 gathered in all of 2016. In March alone, San Francisco collected more than 13,000 syringes, compared with only about 2,900 the same month in 2016.

People, often children, risk getting stuck by discarded needles, raising the prospect they could contract blood-borne diseases such as hepatitis or HIV or be exposed to remnants of heroin or other drugs.

It's unclear whether anyone has gotten sick, but the reports of children finding the needles can be sickening in their own right. One 6-year-old girl in California mistook a discarded syringe for a thermometer and put it in her mouth; she was unharmed.

"I just want more awareness that this is happening," said Nancy Holmes, whose 11-year-old daughter stepped on a needle in Santa Cruz, California, while swimming. "You would hear stories about finding needles at the beach or being poked at the beach. But you think that it wouldn't happen to you. Sure enough."

They are a growing problem in New Hampshire and Massachusetts, two states that have seen many overdose deaths in recent years.

"We would certainly characterize this as a health hazard," said Tim Soucy, health director in Manchester, New Hampshire's largest city, which collected 570 needles in 2016, the first year it began tracking the problem. It has found 247 needles so far this year.

Needles turn up in places like parks, baseball diamonds, trails and beaches — isolated spots where drug users can gather and attract little attention, and often the same spots used by the public for recreation. The needles are tossed out of carelessness or the fear of being prosecuted for possessing them.

One child was poked by a needle left on the grounds of a Utah elementary school. Another youngster stepped on one while playing on a beach in New Hampshire.

Even if adults or children don't get sick, they still must endure an unsettling battery of tests to make sure they didn't catch anything. The girl who put a syringe in her mouth was not poked but had to be tested for hepatitis B and C, her mother said.

Some community advocates are trying to sweep up the pollution.

Rocky Morrison leads a cleanup effort along the Merrimack River, which winds through the old milling city of Lowell, and has recovered hundreds of needles in abandoned homeless camps that dot the banks, as well as in piles of debris that collect in floating booms he recently started setting.

He has a collection of several hundred needles in a fishbowl, a prop he uses to illustrate that the problem is real and that towns must do more to combat it.

"We started seeing it last year here and there. But now, it's just raining needles everywhere we go," said Morrison, a burly, tattooed construction worker whose Clean River Project has six boats working parts of the 117-mile (188-kilometer) river.

Among the oldest tracking programs is in Santa Cruz, California, where the community group Take Back Santa Cruz has reported finding more than 14,500 needles in the county over the past 4 1/2 years. It says it has gotten reports of 12 people getting stuck, half of them children.

"It's become pretty commonplace to find them. We call it a rite of passage for a child to find their first needle," said Gabrielle Korte, a member of the group's needle team. "It's very depressing. It's infuriating. It's just gross."
What the hell is going on in this country?
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Fife
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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by Fife » Mon Jul 17, 2017 6:27 pm

de officiis wrote:What the hell is going on in this country?
I don't know, but it obviously can't be the government's fault. Who is to blame?

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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by de officiis » Mon Jul 17, 2017 6:44 pm

As opioid overdoses exact a higher price, communities ponder who should be saved
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio — The coroner here in the outer suburbs of Cincinnati gets the call almost every day.

Man “slumped over the dining room table.” Woman “found in the garage.” Man “found face down on the kitchen floor of his sister’s residence.” Man “on his bedroom floor — there was a syringe beneath the body.” Coroner Lisa K. Mannix chronicles them all in autopsy reports.

With 96 fatal overdoses in just the first four months of this year, Mannix said the opioid epidemic ravaging western Ohio and scores of other communities along the Appalachian Mountains and the rivers that flow from it continues to worsen. Hospitals are overwhelmed with overdoses, small-town morgues are running out of space for the bodies, and local officials from Kentucky to Maine are struggling to pay for attempting to revive, rehabilitate or bury the victims.

As their budgets strain, communities have begun questioning how much money and effort they should be spending to deal with overdoses, especially in cases involving people who have taken near-fatal overdoses multiple times. State and local officials say it might be time for “tough love”: pushing soaring medical costs onto drug abusers or even limiting how many times first responders can save an individual’s life.

“It’s not that I don’t want to treat overdose victims, it’s that the city cannot afford to treat overdose victims,” said Middletown Council Member Daniel Picard, noting this industrial town in northern Butler County might have to raise taxes in response to the crisis.

The debate comes as demand for opioid antidote medication surges, creating new challenges for police and emergency crews already emotionally drained as they watch their communities — and, in some cases, families — torn apart by opioid addiction. Often, the only thing separating whether an overdose victim goes to the hospital instead of the morgue is a dose of naloxone, also known by the brand name Narcan, a medication that can reverse the effects of opioid overdoses.

Two doses of an injectable form of naloxone, Evzio, cost $4,500, up from $690 in 2014. The price of other forms of the drug, including the nasally administered Narcan, typically range from $70 to $150 per dose, officials say.

Compounding the costs, the potency of the newest batches of opioids often means first responders must administer multiple doses of naloxone to revive patients. Health officials say powerful additives to the illicit market — such as fentanyl and carfentanil, an elephant tranquilizer — are to blame.

Even if saved, an opioid user often is back on drugs within days, if not hours, officials say. Here in Ohio, first responders say it’s not uncommon for overdose victims to have previously been revived with naloxone at least a half-dozen times.

Some officials and residents are starting to ask how a community can bear to try to help those who do not appear to want to help themselves.

The debate has shades of the divisive policy debates about drug treatment and tough jail sentences during urban America’s crack epidemic in the late 1980s and 1990s. But in the suburban and rural communities that largely escaped that epidemic, the debate this time is far more intimate, as residents’ traditional views about law and order — and how to spend limited resources — are being tested by a growing number of addicts.

“You got half the population, probably more, who have been affected by this, and they understand and get it, that this is a disease,” said Scott Gehring, head of Butler County’s Community Health Alliance. “And then you have the other side, and it’s very easy for them to say these people are just a burden.”

In Maine, Gov. Paul LePage (R) has pushed to make overdose survivors pay for their Narcan. LePage also vetoed a bill to expand access to the medicine, but the legislature voted to override him.

In towns across Ohio, similar debates are emerging as legislators ponder both the fiscal and emotional costs of an opioid epidemic that killed nearly 4,000 people in the state in the last year, according to the Ohio’s Health Department. Though figures for 2017 are preliminary, many Ohio officials anticipate this year’s toll will be even higher.

Larry Mulligan Jr., mayor of Middletown, said the city has spent $100,000 on Narcan in the first six months of the year, a tenfold increase from what the town spent during all of last year. Paramedics in Middletown have responded to nearly 600 overdose calls in 2017, already eclipsing the 2016 total, according to city officials.

Picard, the council member, has proposed a controversial three-strikes policy in which first responders wouldn’t administer Narcan to repeated overdose victims. In 2016, Ohio EMS units administered at least 19,570 doses of Naloxone, according to state records covering the first nine months of the year.

“First responders are reaching a new level of frustration responding to multiple calls, for repeated victims, and they just don’t feel like they are making progress,” Mulligan said. “We can’t just keep reviving people. We have to address solutions.”

In Maryland, concerns about funding also have forced the Baltimore Department of Health to ration its dwindling naloxone supplies, providing kits to areas where the need is greatest.

With the help of an algorithm, Leana Wen, Baltimore’s health commissioner, makes decisions about where to supply naloxone kits, prioritizing needle exchanges because addicts who inject drugs are at a high risk of overdosing.
More funding is starting to trickle in from Maryland and charitable groups, but Wen cautions that current funding models are not sustainable because of the scope of the epidemic.

“If this was any other illness, we would never accept rationing of an antidote,” she said.

Congress last year approved a bill to provide $1.1 billion to help address the opioid crisis, and local officials hope that even more federal funding is coming. Several pharmaceutical companies who manufacture naloxone are providing the drugs free or at a discount to first responders and state health departments.

...

The cost of naloxone often isn’t the only issue in dealing with overdoses. In recent weeks, Butler County Sheriff Richard K. Jones has drawn national attention for vowing that his deputies will never carry Narcan because he doesn’t want them playing the role of paramedic.

But Jones — a conservative firebrand who recently advocated that the U.S. military bomb drug cartels in Mexico — says his views also symbolize the community’s transition from frustration to desperation.

People in the nation’s heartland, Jones said, are fed up with “enabling these people” amid a surge in drug-related foster care cases, property crimes and emergency room visits.

“I’ve had three babies born in my jail in 18 months, and the last one was born in the toilet,” said Jones, noting that the female population in the Butler County jail more than doubled in recent years because of drug-related offenses. “The judges, to save the babies, sentence the mothers to jail. But when the women get here, they induce labor so they can get back out and do more heroin.”

Butler County’s chief prosecutor, Michael T. Gmoser, gets angry when he hears about community opposition to naloxone.
He worries that such views are undercutting southwestern Ohio’s reputation for decency and civility.

“What the hell business do we have saying, ‘You don’t get Narcan to treat your sickness; we are going to let you die’?” Gmoser said, pounding his fist on his desk. “I don’t care how many times that sick person comes back asking for another shot of Narcan.”

The sheriff’s stance also puts him at odds with the broader law-enforcement community. According to the Bureau of Justice Assistance, 38 states have implemented naloxone programs for police officers.

“It’s not just the opioid users themselves that we are protecting,” said Keith Cain, the sheriff in Daviess County, Ky., and the chairman of bureau’s Drug Enforcement Committee. “What about the child who gets into mommy’s or daddy’s stash?”
Instead of rebelling against Narcan, drug policy advocates say local officials should focus on getting more users into treatment. Not far from Butler County, in Miami County near Dayton, officials are doing just that.

County paramedics and police now respond to between 50 and 100 overdose calls per month. But in the city of Troy, the county seat and home to 25,000 residents, a paramedic, a police officer and an addictions counselor hit the streets every Wednesday to follow-up with those who they’ve previously saved.

After approaching a woman slumped over a picnic table in a city park last week, the counselor spoke with Kelly Bruner, 30, about her options. Bruner agreed to be transported to a rehabilitation center.

Bruner said in an interview she has overdosed on heroin 13 times in the past year, and she has been revived with Narcan 10 times. Bruner said she and her friends have now started doing “CPR on each other,” after hearing of Picard’s three-strikes proposal in nearby Middletown.

“As long we know you have a pulse and a heartbeat, we aren’t going to call the cops, because no one wants to use that Narcan,” Bruner said. “Because if we can only get Narcan three times, that means there are only two more left before we die.”
If this keeps getting worse, you have to wonder at what point people are going to start exercising the Duterte option.
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Speaker to Animals
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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by Speaker to Animals » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:08 pm

Duterte did nothing wrong.

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I'd put the addicts into mandatory rehab programs, though.

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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by TheReal_ND » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:16 pm

Some communities are having serious discussions about wether or not people need to be revived more than a couple times with narcan.

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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by Speaker to Animals » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:19 pm

Of course they should be revived. It's a disease that these worthless piece of shit drug dealers are capitalizing upon. Put these people in mandatory rehab.

The dealers and traffickers should just get gassed. Seriously.

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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by TheReal_ND » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:23 pm

Well it's worth discussing for some of these communities. Like how many shots do people need? I would say one or two but at the end of the day good people end up paying for this shit so after that, pull the plug. It's like that one kid that got three liver transplants and drank gasoline. There were better candidates than him God knows why he got ahead of everyone else. Maybe being black is good for something in this country.

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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by heydaralon » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:30 pm

Speaker to Animals wrote:Of course they should be revived. It's a disease that these worthless piece of shit drug dealers are capitalizing upon. Put these people in mandatory rehab.

The dealers and traffickers should just get gassed. Seriously.
You don't think there is any personal accountability here? If this was something like transgenderism, where some homo was saying that the problem wasn't with him but it was society's fault for making things patriarchal or not incentivizing or whatever you would be pretty pissed at that argument. You said yourself that you stopped using prescription drugs when you didn't need them anymore. The dealers are probably lousy people, but I feel like without the demand they would be doing some other hustle.
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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by Speaker to Animals » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:32 pm

heydaralon wrote:
Speaker to Animals wrote:Of course they should be revived. It's a disease that these worthless piece of shit drug dealers are capitalizing upon. Put these people in mandatory rehab.

The dealers and traffickers should just get gassed. Seriously.
You don't think there is any personal accountability here? If this was something like transgenderism, where some homo was saying that the problem wasn't with him but it was society's fault for making things patriarchal or not incentivizing or whatever you would be pretty pissed at that argument. You said yourself that you stopped using prescription drugs when you didn't need them anymore. The dealers are probably lousy people, but I feel like without the demand they would be doing some other hustle.

I didn't say there was some patriarchal cause of this. Obviously people make shitty choices to get there. But once there, it's a disease. If somebody is addicted to heroin, they should be institutionalized until they are clean. If they return to it, wouldn't they be better off in an institution than dead on the streets?

And feeding heroin dealers to crocodiles wouldn't sound so horrific to you if your daughter died from an overdose in a Taco Bell. That happened here in North Carolina. This girl was an addict. The last time she was arrested, her mother pleaded with the judge to put her in a mandatory rehab, and if he didn't, she said her daughter would end up dead. He did not, and she died.

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Re: Nationwide Arrests for Opioid Fraud & Prescription Abuse

Post by heydaralon » Mon Jul 17, 2017 7:37 pm

Speaker to Animals wrote:
heydaralon wrote:
Speaker to Animals wrote:Of course they should be revived. It's a disease that these worthless piece of shit drug dealers are capitalizing upon. Put these people in mandatory rehab.

The dealers and traffickers should just get gassed. Seriously.
You don't think there is any personal accountability here? If this was something like transgenderism, where some homo was saying that the problem wasn't with him but it was society's fault for making things patriarchal or not incentivizing or whatever you would be pretty pissed at that argument. You said yourself that you stopped using prescription drugs when you didn't need them anymore. The dealers are probably lousy people, but I feel like without the demand they would be doing some other hustle.

I didn't say there was some patriarchal cause of this. Obviously people make shitty choices to get there. But once there, it's a disease. If somebody is addicted to heroin, they should be institutionalized until they are clean. If they return to it, wouldn't they be better off in an institution than dead on the streets?
I'm not trying to put words in your mouth at all. All I'm saying is that in most things relating to culture and morals you seem like a strong proponent of personal responsibility. I just don't understand the hatred towards dealers or shady doctors or whatever. Without addicts wanting to get high, these people would be out of business. In my opinion, blaming the supplier is missing the entire picture because they are arising from a demand. If the supplier goes away, the demand will be filled by someone else. Idk. I'm not sure about mandatory rehab. I have known some functional alcholics and a few addicts over the years. Institutionalization should be offered, but it also comes with its own problems. But for some people, maybe it is the best thing.
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