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Addiction News

News related to the field of substance abuse, addiction, and addiction treatment.

heroin overdoses,mass heroin overdose,fentanyl overdose,carfentanil overdose,heroin addiction,needle exchange,opioid overdose,opioid treatment, addiction education

Surge of heroin overdoses hits Kentucky county

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A sudden spike in heroin overdoses was reported in Montgomery County, Kentucky, on Wednesday. The surge in overdoses came shortly after similar outbreaks in cities neighboring Kentucky, in Ohio and West Virginia.

The number of overdoses in the Kentucky county rose to 18 in one day, and one of the victims has died. The proximity to mass heroin overdose reports in nearby cities has led officials to wonder if Kentucky may be at the epicenter of an extremely dangerous supply of heroin.

Overdose-reversing drug saves lives in Cincinnati heroin outbreak

Only one day prior to the overdose outbreak in Kentucky, more than 20 people in the Cincinnati area survived heroin overdoses within the span of just two hours. This shows how fast an outbreak of drug overdoses can occur, with the potential to overwhelm emergency responders. Fortunately, first responders carry naloxone, a drug that can reverse the effects of overdose. But public officials have noted that a single dose of naloxone may not always be effective in reviving an overdose victim, especially when there is an unusually powerful opioid present, often unsuspected by the drug user. That’s why health officials have recommended giving multiple doses of naloxone until it succeeds in reviving the victim, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Alarmingly, the overdose count from Cincinnati, from Tuesday through Wednesday, has now reached 78 overdoses. Officials in the Greater Cincinnati area were aware that a powerful opioid called carfentanil had entered the drug supply in the region. It was noted in the Cincinnati Enquirer only two days before the surge of heroin overdoses took place. The story notes that this substance is 100 times more powerful than fentanyl. To put that in perspective, drugs laced with fentanyl already make for an increased likelihood of overdose. Kentucky officials suspect the rash of heroin overdoses on Wednesday also involved the presence of these potent opioids in the supply of drugs.

Mass heroin overdoses in WV create national headlines, local dialogues

Last week officials from surrounding regions met in Kenton County, Kentucky, for a task force meeting around the heroin and opioid epidemic. In attendance was the mayor of Huntington, West Virginia, where a spike in heroin overdoses—26 total—had made national headlines earlier in the week. Officials have been at a loss for how to combat the sudden surges in overdose. However, comments from community members at a Huntington City Council meeting indicated that many think wider availability of treatment services is the greatest current need.

These events also highlight the need to educate individuals and communities about the dangers of drug supplies, tolerance, and overdose. While heroin is already deadly enough, those who buy it off the street are often unaware that it might be laced with an even more dangerous substance like fentanyl or carfentanil. Public health education initiatives and quick reporting of overdose spikes could help communities be aware of when particularly dangerous drug combinations are in the region.

In addition, more education is needed about drug tolerance and associated overdose risks. Those who have built up a high tolerance for opioids through continued use are at risk, especially if they have recently stopped using for a period of time. During that time their tolerance decreases, meaning that if they go back to using the amount they formerly did, their body might not be able to handle it. This is a common mechanism for how people suffer an overdose.

The mass heroin overdose reports out of West Virginia, Ohio, and Kentucky, in just over a week have thrown a spotlight on how desperate is the need for more education and more treatment options. With such high numbers of overdoses, time is of the essence.

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kentucky NAS, neonatal abstinence syndrome, opioid dependent mother, prenatal addiction treatment, opioid crisis ky, drug treatment pregnancy

Kentucky NAS incidence among the highest, study shows

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Kentucky NAS rates continue to increase, consistent with a multi-state trend of greater numbers of infants born with this opioid-related medical condition. Neonatal abstinence syndrome, or NAS, produces painful withdrawal symptoms in some infants birthed by women who use opioid drugs. A study newly reported by the CDC has shown that incidences of NAS in 28 states have skyrocketed over the last decade and a half. Reporting of this medical condition quadrupled from 1999–2013. This shows us that many states have an urgent need for new measures to prevent and treat a condition affecting the most vulnerable among us.

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Stepworks of Elizabethtown Coming Soon

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Stepworks of Elizabethtown will soon be able to open its doors to more people looking for help for addiction. If you caught our recent announcement, you know that the company is set to open new facilities in Elizabethtown and Bowling Green, KY. Stepworks of Elizabethtown is coming soon, and we wanted to give you a sneak peek at the exciting work in progress!

In this first look, our corporate administrator and long-time Stepworks staff member, Sherry Coomer, talks about the preparations being made at Stepworks of Elizabethtown. The facility will provide 32 beds for residential treatment, and construction has been ongoing since the beginning of this year. What was once a physician’s facility has been remodeled to become a welcoming and comfortable treatment center for our clients.

Stepworks of Elizabethtown will be ready to open in the coming weeks. That means there will soon be 32 new treatment beds in the state of Kentucky, with even more on the way in Bowling Green. We can’t wait to offer expanded access to treatment to central Kentucky and surrounding regions. Look for more information as we post it here and at the Stepworks Facebook page!

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KY & NH weigh using Vivitrol to treat those incarcerated

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Inside jails and prisons, many people who are in need of treatment for addiction have few options but to wait. For those who are addicted to heroin and opioids, medication-assisted treatment is simply not available. Or at least it hasn’t been. Some states are now looking at the drug Vivitrol as a possibly safer alternative to opioid medications like methadone that have a potential for misuse. Kentucky is one of them.

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stepworks recovery centers,meth addiction,crystal meth abuse,methamphetamine abuse

How meth addiction makes it hard to escape drug abuse

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Addiction doesn’t recognize boundaries, whether they are the boundaries that separate one addictive drug from another or the differences between one person and another. Anyone can suffer from the disease of addiction regardless of biology or background. Any addictive substance can be the one that destroys a life. Writing in Esquire, Christine Suhan offers a powerful account of her struggle to emerge from the depths of a debilitating meth addiction.

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More treatment needed for opiate-dependent pregnant women

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Individual drug users aren’t always the only ones who suffer as a result of their drug use. Hikes in the number of infants born with neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) highlight the need for programs that treat opiate-dependent pregnant women. The problem of addiction during pregnancy is growing throughout the U.S., but the biggest crises are taking place in southern states like Kentucky. The Courier-Journal reports an alarming rise in NAS in the span of just one year. From 2013 to 2014, the number of infants admitted for hospital care for the syndrome in KY rose by 48 percent.

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Here’s where the KY heroin treatment funding is going

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Back in March 2015, Kentucky lawmakers passed a heroin bill that, for many fighting the heroin epidemic in the state, was a long time coming. Now state officials have outlined plans for how they will allocate the $10 million of funding that was included in the final KY heroin treatment bill. KY Justice Secretary J. Michael Brown shared how the funds would be split between different treatment vectors in the state. Much of the funding will be going to the Department of Corrections in some form or another, while another large portion will be reserved for community mental health and treatment facilities.

In an interview with the Cincinnati Enquirer, Brown emphasized the state’s determination to channel funds to programs that prove they use evidence-based treatment methods and get good treatment results. The state will reportedly begin accepting grant applications from mental health and substance abuse treatment centers in July. According to the Enquirer, advocates for heroin treatment in Northern Kentucky have been critical of the funding allocations. Some feel that the state should be explicitly expanding treatment capacity at rehab facilities with the funding instead of waiting for grant applications. They claim the need for heroin treatment in Northern KY is acute and urgent.

Is too much of the funding being reserved for KY heroin treatment in jails?

Another point of contention seems to be that the largest portion of heroin funding is going to supplement programs in jails and the criminal justice system in general. A total of $3 million will be used to fund substance abuse treatment programs in jails for county and state inmates. Northern KY county jails have already announced projects to expand substance abuse treatment programs in their facilities. Half of the $3 million in Department of Corrections funding will be used to provide medication for maintenance treatment for those who are released from incarceration.

Another portion of the funding has been reserved for the creation of “rocket docket” programs intended to speed up prosecution and sentencing procedures for drug offenders. Although the primary intention here is to increase efficiency in the courts, it should also result in county jails that are better able to provide detox and treatment to inmates by reducing overcrowding. Currently, local jails cannot meet the demand for treatment due to large inmate populations with a high rate of substance abuse disorders. These new funding measures aim to create a more efficient drug treatment system in the county jails.

More funding for pregnant women seeking KY heroin treatment

More of the funding will be used to enhance other vital drug treatment programs. A social workers program intended to promote alternative sentencing plans for drug offenders will receive $1.2 million. Another $1 million will go to programs that provide services to addicted pregnant women and infants suffering from neonatal abstinence syndrome. The latter is an important area of treatment, with many noting the need for more programs that address the medical concerns of pregnant women suffering from substance abuse.

Northern KY to create new drug policy center

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Several KY counties seek to improve Northern KY drug treatment efforts by creating a shared policy center for the region, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer. The Northern KY Office of Drug Control Policy is planned to open July 1, 2015, using funds from three counties in the region: Kenton, Boone, and Campbell Counties. This regional office will be tasked with the research and proposal of effective drug treatment and prevention methods for the counties, which are facing tough problems with drug abuse, especially from heroin.

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HIV outbreak from drug abuse in Indiana puts KY at risk

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A recent outbreak of HIV infection in rural Indiana has Kentucky officials on alert for new HIV infection cases from sharing needles while injecting heroin and other opioid drugs. In May, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported an HIV outbreak centered in a small rural community in Indiana, in which most individuals who were infected had been engaged in shared drug use activity, most commonly injecting an opioid painkiller with shared syringes. They found that 135 people in a community of 4,200 were infected with the virus. Kentucky health officials are concerned the state could be at risk for a similar outbreak.

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Northern KY sees success in reducing heroin deaths

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Fewer people died from heroin overdose in 2014 than in the previous year in some Northern KY counties, where the heroin epidemic is hitting communities the hardest. This comes as encouraging news for a region desperate for effective solutions to a drug problem that has seemed only to worsen in recent years. While the decrease in overdose deaths in some counties may be small, it could be a sign that prevention and treatment strategies are finally starting to reverse the epidemic.

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