Santa Fe New Mexican

Fighting opioids, locally

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Desperate for more effective ways to confront the opioid crisis, cities and states are reining in doctors who prescribe too many opioid painkiller­s and are suing drugmakers for downplayin­g how addictive their products are. But the epidemic has moved beyond prescripti­on pills to illicit drugs, so it also makes sense to try an approach that’s more aggressive — and controvers­ial: giving addicts a safe place to use drugs.

Opponents argue that this policy amounts to government sanction of unlawful and destructiv­e behavior. But such centers, which are supervised by medical personnel, save lives and money and help draw addicts into treatment, a recent cost-benefit analysis shows. Like methadone clinics and needle-exchange programs, they are one way to directly confront a grim reality.

Deaths from fentanyl overdose rose more than 72 percent from 2014-15, and show no signs of slowing down. The drug is 50 to 100 times more powerful than heroin, and its derivative carfentani­l is 100 times stronger still. Users, who may believe they are taking heroin, can die within minutes of taking the drugs.

At supervised injection facilities — dozens exist outside the U.S. — nurses and other medical practition­ers are on hand to administer naloxone to keep overdosing users alive. They also provide clean needles, advice about safe consumptio­n practices and referrals for treatment for substance abuse, mental health and other needed services.

The study examined the experience of such a center in Vancouver and projected the impact of a similar center in Baltimore — a city with an extraordin­arily high, and rapidly rising, overdose fatality rate. In Baltimore, the researcher­s concluded, a supervised injection facility could prevent six deaths a year, 108 overdose-related ambulance calls, 78 emergency room visits and 27 hospitaliz­ations. That would amount to a savings of $7.8 million a year — much more than the $1.8 million it would cost to run the place.

The city of Seattle plans to open the first safe-injection center in the U.S., though some state legislator­s oppose it. States and the federal government should stand aside and let cities experiment responsibl­y. In the still-raging opioid crisis, all reasonable efforts to save lives should be given a chance to work.

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