Heroin Use Increasingly Seen in Suburbs Across the Country
As prescription painkillers become more difficult to obtain
and abuse, a growing number of people addicted to these drugs are
switching to heroin, USA Today reports. The trend is increasingly being seen in the suburbs.
Health officials and police report a significant rise in overdoses
and crime, the newspaper notes. Last fall, the Northern New England
Poison Center reported a jump in heroin overdoses in Maine, Vermont and
New Hampshire. “When you switch to heroin, you don’t know what’s in
there from batch to batch,” said the center’s director, Karen Simone.
“It’s a big jump to go to heroin. It may be strong; it may be weak. They
don’t know what they are getting. Suddenly, the whole game changes.”
Heroin is popular in large part because it is cheap, officials say.
While an 80-milligram OxyContin costs between $60 to $100 a pill on the
black market, heroin costs $45 to $60 for a multiple-dose supply.
OxyContin abuse has also been declining because the drug has been
reformulated so it is more difficult to crush and snort.
According to the 2011 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, the number of people who were past-year heroin users in 2011 (620,000) was higher than the number in 2007 (373,000).
“Heroin is huge. We’ve never had anything like it in this state,”
said Carol Falkowski, the former drug abuse strategy officer for
Minnesota and a member of the Community Epidemiology Working Group at
the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which tracks trends in drug use.
“It’s very affordable. It’s very high purity. Most people did not
believe that heroin would happen here in Lake Woebegone, but it really
has a grip, not only in the Twin Cities, but all around the state.”
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