Houston Chronicle

Heroin use, addiction surging in U.S.

Federal report says abuse of the drug parallels that of prescripti­on narcotics

- By Lisa Girion LOS ANGELES TIMES

Heroin use surged over the past decade, and the wave of addiction and overdose is closely related to the nation’s ongoing prescripti­on drug epidemic, federal health officials said Tuesday.

A new report says that 2.6 out of every 1,000 U.S. residents 12 and older used heroin in the years 2011 to 2013. That’s a 63 percent increase in the rate of heroin use since the years 2002 to 2004.

The rate of heroin abuse or dependence climbed 90 percent over the same period, according to the study by researcher­s from the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Deaths caused by heroin overdoses nearly quadrupled between 2002 and 2013, claiming 8,257 lives in 2013.

Poor, young hit hard

In all, more than half a million people used heroin in 2013, up nearly 150 percent since 2007, the report said.

Heroin use remained highest for the historical­ly hardest-hit group: poor young men living in cities. But increases were spread across all demographi­c groups, including women and people with private insurance and high incomes — groups associated with the parallel rise in prescripti­on drug use over the past decade.

The findings appear in a Vital Signs report published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

“As a doctor who started my career taking care of patients with HIV and other complicati­ons from injection drugs, it’s heartbreak­ing to see injection drug use making a comeback in the U.S.,” said Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the CDC.

All but 4 percent of the people who used heroin in the past year also used another drug, such as cocaine, marijuana or alcohol, according to the report. Indeed, 61 percent of heroin users used at least three different drugs.

The authors of the new study highlighte­d a “particular­ly strong” relationsh­ip between the use of prescripti­on painkiller­s and heroin. People who are addicted to narcotic painkiller­s are 40 times more likely to misuse heroin, according to the study.

‘We are priming people’

Once reserved for cancer and end-of-life pain, these narcotics now are widely prescribed for conditions ranging from dental work to chronic back pain.

“We are priming people to addiction to heroin with overuse of prescripti­on opiates,” Frieden said at a news conference Tuesday.

Frieden said the increase in heroin use was contributi­ng to other health problems, including rising rates of new HIV infections, cases of newborns addicted to opiates and car accidents.

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