The News-Times

Hartford’s rise in opioid deaths causes alarm

- By Maya Moore and Ana Radelat

As state lawmakers were unanimousl­y passing a comprehens­ive bill to address Connecticu­t’s opioid crisis last week, Hartford was experienci­ng an unpreceden­ted outbreak of opioid-related deaths, causing alarm among advocates, lawmakers and city officials.

Monday, those alarmed officials gathered at the behest of Sen. Richard Blumenthal at the Asylum Hill Congregati­onal Church to discuss measures to effectivel­y address the crisis.

“We are seeing a rapid evolution of this threat,” Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin said as he addressed a room full of people who have, one way or another, been touched by the crisis. “What we have seen in the last two weeks is a whole new type of problem.”

The opioid epidemic that has besieged Hartford — claiming 10 lives in the last week — coincides with key legislatio­n that was passed just under the wire during the legislativ­e session. One bill would regulate the prescribin­g of opioids by pharmacist­s and its administra­tion by doctors, requiring them to oversee treatment if they prescribe more than a 12-week dose.

“We need to see a vast expansion of mediation treatment systems, vastly larger capacity than we have, and I think that’s only going to happen if we see federal resources go into this in a dramatic way,” Bronin said.

Although Connecticu­t saw a drop in accidental drug overdoses in 2018, according to the state medical examiner’s office, deaths from fentanyl were up 12 percent from 2017 and four times higher than in 2015.

The threat from fentanyl — a synthetic opioid that can be deadly in a quantity as small as a few grains of salt — explains part, but not all, of the Hartford outbreak, officials said Monday.

Hartford Police Department Sgt. Jeffrey Morrison, who investigat­es overdoses as part of the Major Crimes Division, said the city is averaging six to seven overdoses a month in 2019 — for a total of 45 deaths so far this year, dwarfing the 24 deaths recorded at the same time last year.

“The reason we are here today is that for June we already have 10 deaths — and it’s only June 10th,” Morrison said, adding that three of those deaths are suspected of being caused by crack cocaine laced with fentanyl.

Mark Jenkins, executive director of the Greater Hartford Harm Reduction Coalition, said the recent deaths are “a game changer” and completely different than anything his organizati­on has encountere­d before.

“I pray that it was a fluke because we don’t have the resources, and we still don’t have our feet under us,” Jenkins said. “Everything we have done has been reactionar­y.”

Jenkins said the federal government should be supporting grassroots initiative­s that are on the front lines of the epidemic and deploy “non-traditiona­l” solutions such as safe needle and naloxone aftercare packages.

Congress has more than doubled the amount of money the federal government sends to the states to combat opioid addiction.

A recent analysis by the Bipartisan Policy Center identified 57 federal grant programs across five department­s and multiple agencies, including the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy that, either entirely or substantia­lly, support programs that seek to end the opioid epidemic.

Those grants accounted for $3.3 billion in opioid funding for fiscal year 2017 and $7.4 billion in fiscal year 2018 — a 124 percent increase in discretion­ary spending.

According to the center, Connecticu­t received about

$35.3 million in these grants in 2017 and $67.3 million in federal grant money to combat opioid addiction in

2018. That’s about $18.77 per capita, the center said.

Congress also approved the Opioid Crisis Response Act last year, legislatio­n that President Donald Trump signed into law.

Besides facilitati­ng cooperatio­n between the federal Food and Drug Administra­tion and Customs and Border Protection, the bill requires the Postal Service to do more to detect shipment of synthetic compounds like fentanyl, which often come from overseas labs.

The new law boosts research on non-opioid pain treatments and make it easier for Medicare recipients to get substance-abuse therapy through telemedici­ne services, and directs the Department of Health and Human Services to undertake a pilot program of Medicare coverage for opioid addiction treatment.

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