Porterville Recorder

State inmate overdoses plummet under drug program

- By DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The spiraling number of overdose deaths and hospitaliz­ations among California prison inmates fell dramatical­ly during the first two years of a program that uses prescribed drugs to treat more incarcerat­ed addicts than any such program in the country, officials said Tuesday.

The rate of overdose deaths dropped 58% after the program began in 2020. Hospitaliz­ations were 48% lower among those receiving the anti-craving drugs than among those waiting to begin treatment. The promising results show the program was effective even after accounting for restrictio­ns during the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to doctors and researcher­s with the state correction­s system and the federal official who oversees medical care in

California prisons.

The report says the large scale results “are trending in a positive direction” and officials are “cautiously optimistic.”

The findings come as Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administra­tion seeks $126.6 million in the next fiscal year and $162.5 million annually thereafter to expand treatment. The report said expanding the state’s latest expensive attempt to curtail the prisons’ pervasive drug problem is “at the highest priority level,” given the impact on prisoner health, community safety upon inmates’ release, and drug traffickin­g and violence it brings to prisons.

The state’s approach includes the once-controvers­ial step of using drugs including buprenorph­ine, naltrexone and methadone to dampen addicts’ cravings and euphoria and relieve withdrawal symptoms while weening them off opioids. It took years of urging by lawmakers and treatment profession­als for prison officials to try the program, although the approach is now widely used and has general support from California prosecutor­s and probation officers.

Early critics objected that the treatment substitute­d one drug for another, and that there could be a black market for some of the substitute drugs. In California, inmates are given the drugs in a sheet that dissolves under the tongue or by injection and are tested to make sure they are taking their medication­s.

More than 22,600 inmates have received the drugs and officials expect to eventually include 25,000 inmates annually, more than a quarter of the prison population. The program far exceeds the volume of treatments in any other U.S. correction­al setting,

California prison officials said.

In 2019, California’s prison system had a recordhigh 51 overdose deaths per 100,000 inmates, more than double the overall death rate for other state prison systems. The death rate in California had been steadily climbing since 2012.

It fell to a rate of 21 deaths per 100,000 inmates in 2020 and to a preliminar­y estimate of 20 deaths per 100,000 inmates in 2021, with a final report on last year’s deaths not expected until late this year.

Overdoses were the thirdleadi­ng cause of death for California inmates before the program, but dropped to eighth in 2020, the lowest ranking in nine years.

“I’m not surprised at the results, because it’s been proven to be an effective therapy that saves lives and reduces crime,” said Don Specter, an attorney for inmates in some of the largest class-action lawsuits against the prison system.

J. Clark Kelso, the federal official who oversees inmate health, called the findings “a step in the right direction.”

The results contrast with opioid deaths that increased across the U.S. as a whole. Driven largely by highly toxic fentanyl, overdose deaths rose from about 21,000 in 2010 to more than 100,000 last year.

Overdoses in California prisons began to drop about six months before the pandemic and continued after the department eased restrictio­ns on visits and inmate movements, officials said. They said other state prison systems with similar pandemic restrictio­ns did not see similar declines in overdose deaths and hospitaliz­ations.

The results track earlier outcomes after prison officials began treating 60 inmates with medication in 2016.

Officials estimate that at least 65% of inmates have a substance abuse problem.

The use of anti-craving drugs is part of an approach that includes what is known as “cognitive behavioral therapy,” in which people talk with mental health counselors to identify and change their own self-destructiv­e behavior.

The program also aims to ease former drug users’ transition back into the community, helping more than 2,200 parolees so far arrange continued treatment after their release.

Steven Fama, another attorney who represents inmates and tracks prison treatment programs, said correction­s officials have slowly but steadily increased treatment and reduced the waitlist over the last two years, although there still are tens of thousands of inmates awaiting screening to see if they qualify.

Correction­s officials said their goal is now to reduce the backlog, while developing therapy for inmates serving short sentences. They also aim to improve the handoff of parolees to community based treatment.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? In this Wednesday, May 20, 2015, file photo, Bentley, a 3-year-old Labrador retriever, checks an inmate for traces of narcotics at California State Prison, Solano, in Vacaville, Calif. Along with drug sniffing dogs and airport-style ion spectromet­er that tests for illegal narcotics to stop the flow of drugs into California prisons, officials said Tuesday April 26, 2022 that the United State’s largest medication-assisted treatment program aimed at addiction among inmates has reduced a surge in drug overdose deaths and hospitaliz­ations plaguing California’s prison system.
AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I In this Wednesday, May 20, 2015, file photo, Bentley, a 3-year-old Labrador retriever, checks an inmate for traces of narcotics at California State Prison, Solano, in Vacaville, Calif. Along with drug sniffing dogs and airport-style ion spectromet­er that tests for illegal narcotics to stop the flow of drugs into California prisons, officials said Tuesday April 26, 2022 that the United State’s largest medication-assisted treatment program aimed at addiction among inmates has reduced a surge in drug overdose deaths and hospitaliz­ations plaguing California’s prison system.

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