Montreal Gazette

Heroin reappears in New England

‘We’ve got overdose deaths in the bathrooms of fast-food restaurant­s,’ police say

- KATHARINE Q. SEELYE THE NEW YORK TIMES

PORTLAND, ME. — Heroin, which has long flourished in the big U.S. urban centres, has been making an alarming comeback in the smaller cities and towns of New England.

From quaint fishing villages on the Maine coast to the interior of the Great North Woods extending across Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, officials report a sharp rise in the availabili­ty of the crystallin­e powder and in overdoses and deaths attributed to it.

“It’s easier to get heroin in some of these places than it is to get a UPS delivery,” said Dr. Mark Publicker, an addiction specialist.

Here in Portland, better known for its laid-back vibe and lively waterfront, posters warn of the dangers of overdose. “Please,” they say: “Do Not Use Alone. Do a Tester Shot” and “Use the Recovery Position” (which is lying on one’s side to avoid choking on vomit).

The city, like many others across the country, is experienci­ng “an inordinate number of heroin overdoses,” said Vern Malloch, assistant chief of the Portland Police Department. “We’ve got overdose deaths in the bathrooms of fast-food restaurant­s. This is an increase like we haven’t seen in many years.”

Heroin killed 21 people in Maine last year, three times as many as in 2011, says the state’s Office of Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services. New Hampshire recorded 40 deaths from heroin overdoses last year, up from just seven a decade ago. In Vermont, the Health Department reported that 914 people were treated for heroin abuse last year, up from 654 the year before, an increase of almost 40 per cent.

“Heroin is our biggest problem right now,” said Capt. Scott Tucker of the Rutland, Vt., police.

One reason for the rise in heroin use is the restrictio­ns on doctors in prescribin­g painkiller­s. The tightened supply of pain pills, and physical changes that made them harder to crush and snort for a quick high, have diverted many users to heroin, which is much cheaper and easier to get. Publicker, president of the Northern New England Society of Addiction Medicine, said some doctors in the region had been overprescr­ibing painkiller­s, which can be gateway drugs to heroin. A federal study in 2011 showed that the treatment admission rate for opiate addiction was higher in Maine, and New England, than elsewhere in the country, though communitie­s everywhere are reporting problems.

“We had a bad epidemic, and now we have a worse epidemic,” Publicker said. “I’m treating 21-, 22-year-old pregnant women with intravenou­s heroin addiction.”

Theresa Dumond, 23, who lives on the streets of Portland, said she sells her body three times a day to support her heroin habit. She lost custody of her two young children about a year ago (“I can’t keep track”), and their father died.

“I’ve lost everything,” she said as she and a companion, Jason Lemay, 26, walked to an abandoned train tunnel, littered with old needles and trash, to shoot up. “The heroin numbs the pain and makes you not care about life,” she said.

Her only concern is scoring more. She pays no attention to food and sleeps where she is or in a shelter.

Once deep inside the train tunnel, she helped Lemay inject a needle into one of his legs — he had no good veins left in his arms — and then jabbed a needle into her own arm. “It’s the best feeling ever,” she said. “It’s the warm rush.”

With more people becoming addicted, officials in New England are bracing for the likely consequenc­es: more burglaries so addicts can support their habits and heavier demands on health, welfare and law enforcemen­t services. Novice users are more likely to share needles, leading to an expected increase in infections like HIV and hepatitis C.

Maine is the first state that has limited access to specific medication­s, including buprenorph­ine and methadone, that have proven effective in treating addiction, a step taken to save money. Many here worry that such restrictio­ns are likely to make things worse and lead to more fatalities.

For now, emergency responders are busier than ever.

“We used to have just two or three overdose calls a week,” said Terry Walsh, Portland’s deputy fire chief, who oversees emergency medical services. “Now we’re seeing two, three, four a day.”

Most of the heroin reaching New England originates in Colombia and comes through Mexico, federal law enforcemen­t officials said. The number of seizures along the border jumped sixfold in 2011 from 2005. But enough is getting through to major distributi­on centres in the Northeast, including Philadelph­ia and New York, that it is flowing steadily into northern New England.

The purity of the heroin varies widely, which law enforcemen­t officers say is partly responsibl­e for the increase in deaths, and bad batches have been reported throughout the region. Even an experience­d user might not be prepared for the strength of a particular bag. And because heroin reaches the brain so quickly — and witnesses hesitate to call for help immediatel­y — overdoses are often fatal.

Lourdes Watson-Carter, 34, who lived in a small town near here, had been a heroin addict for several years, said her family and friends. They said her addiction led her to prostitute herself to pay for her next fix.

After her most recent term in prison, for drug traffickin­g, her friends and family thought she was clean. She was even preparing to go back to school in cosmetolog­y and hairdressi­ng and hoped she might regain custody of her young son.

But one night last month, WatsonCart­er injected some very pure heroin, says her father, Michael Watson, a retired Amtrak police officer, who lives in Maryland.

“She was taking the same amount she would usually take, but it was so concentrat­ed and pure that she overdosed,” he said. By the time an ambulance arrived, she may have been brain-dead; he received conflictin­g reports. She caught pneumonia a few days later and then died.

Her death was especially awful, her father said, because he thought she was finally turning her life around.

“But I knew I was going to get that call someday,” he said. “You try to prepare yourself for it, and you think you can handle it. But you don’t handle it very well.”

 ?? CHERYL SENTER/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Community health worker Zoe Odlin-Platz, left, exchanges needles for heroin addicts Theresa Dumond, right, and her companion, Jason Lemay.
CHERYL SENTER/ THE NEW YORK TIMES Community health worker Zoe Odlin-Platz, left, exchanges needles for heroin addicts Theresa Dumond, right, and her companion, Jason Lemay.

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