Too many opioid cases in our region
Long before President Donald Trump declared the opioid crisis a national public health emergency, local authorities were dealing with the fallout.
From October through December, there were 29 overdose cases at the St. Luke’s Gnaden Huetten and Palmerton campuses, according to Sam Kennedy, corporate communications director, St. Luke’s University Health Network, St. Luke’s Gnaden Huetten Campus in Lehighton.
Lansford Borough Police Chief Jack Soberick said his department has frequently used Narcan to counter the effects of opioid overdoses.
“We were not the first department to use it in Carbon County, but certainly used it probably more than all the departments combined,” Soberick said. “It’s a tool in our arsenal.”
Soberick added, “Contrary to misconception, we weren’t going back to the same addicts over and over again and saving them.”
“Usually when we got that call, it was somebody known to us as a user,” he said.
Soberick said he believes the solution has to be a “multipronged” approach.
“We make arrests, we enforce the law, we try to assist people in any way possible to help get people into rehabs,” he said. “Our job is to help break that cycle.”
Schuylkill County coroner David Moylan said the opioid crisis is real.
“Our problem has not lessened,” Moylan said. “We’re deluged with opioid intoxication cases.”
So many cases
“If the president wants to declare a national emergency, I’d declare it on the opioid crisis,” Moylan said. “It’s an emergency crisis.”
“There’s so many of these cases that we can’t autopsy them all,” he said. “We’re going to present this to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”
Moylan added, “We have a tool to try to stem this epidemic. We need to take this tool that the lawmakers have given us and use that to control the delivery.”
“It’s an epidemic,” he said. “Essentially you’ve got to find where the source is, where the pathogen is, and eradicate it.”
Moylan explained that in his role as a coroner, he must determine the cause, and then figure out the manner.
“These aren’t natural deaths,” he said. “Could it be an accident? Yeah I can see an accident, but most of them aren’t accidental.”
Carbon County Coroner Robert Miller said he isn’t sure what the answer is.
“I really don’t know what the answer is. They’re trying to rehab and stuff like this,” Miller said. “I don’t think these people listen. They know what drugs can do to their system. I don’t think that they care.”
Miller said that in 2015, the county had 18 overdoses for illicit drugs, 18 in 2016, 28 in 2017, and 29 last year, along with two cases pending.
“We’re not that bad in Carbon,” he said. “Some of these numbers in other counties are astronomical.”
Miller said he attributes that to Carbon County having such a high elderly population.
“Fifties and 60s and up, we don’t see many overdoses there; it’s mostly 30s and 40s,” he said. “I don’t know what the answer is; it’s a mixture.”
Getting treatment
Last year, state Rep. Doyle Heffley, R-Carbon, sponsored a bill that would create a detoxification bed registry to facilitate treatment for drug addiction.
Under the bill — which passed the House unanimously — the Department of Human Services would develop and administer an Internet-based detoxification bed registry to collect, aggregate and display information about available beds in public and private inpatient psychiatric facilities and licensed detoxification and rehabilitation facilities for the treatment of people in need of inpatient hospitalization or detoxification.
This registry would contain information for facilities and licensed providers; information regarding the number of beds available at a facility; and provide a search function to identify available beds that are appropriated for the treatment of a substance abuse emergency.
Heffley also introduced a bill, Warm Hand Off legislation, an act providing for transferring overdose survivors to addiction treatment, for a comprehensive warm handoff initiative; establishing the Warm Hand-Off Initiative Grant Program; providing for consents and for immunity; establishing the Overdose Recovery Task Force; and, providing for overdose stabilization and warm handoff centers, for rules and regulations and for annual report.
He said hearings are scheduled next month in Harrisburg for the Warm Hand Off Legislation, a bill that has been modeled after the Blue Guardian program that’s been successful in Lehigh County.
“There’s been a lot of talk lately about Narcan that’s been administered hundreds of times throughout the county and state, saving thousands of lives,” Heffley said. “(The question becomes), how do we get people into treatment.”
Heffley said Pennsylvania lost about 2,300 people to overdoses last year, noting that it’s the No. 1 leading cause of accidental deaths in the state.
“It really is an epidemic,” he said. “There’s nothing more heartbreaking then sitting with a family who lost a 19- or 20-year-old daughter or son who they lost to opioids addiction.”
Heffley said the opioids epidemic is something that affects every level.
“It really is something that we need to address,” he said. “We need to do more to keep our community safe.”
Heffley praised the federal, state and local government for stepping up.
“We all have to work together in this,” he said. “I commend administration, and the funding they have provided is a good thing.”
Heffley said they plan to continue to work with the state Department of Health to “encourage them to make sure these solutions don’t get bogged down in bureaucracy.”
“We’re losing more people to this opioid epidemic than we ever did to AIDS,” he said. “Addiction left untreated is always fatal. We want to try to help get these people treatment.”
Comments
You have been conquered by President Trump and the Republicans. Displaying hate to your core of your miserable being indicates it. President Trump and Republicans live “rent-free” in your mind. We all can tell that that little mind of yours is overfilled with hatred all of the time. When Paunxsutawney Phil didn’t see his shadow last week, was that because of evil deviant Republicans? You have been broken down to jibbering mush by your own hatred. Touché!
So as you all said during the campaign, "suck it up buttercup", "F#ck your feelings" ! So, get used to it, I'm going no where.
"RIGHT", doesn't mean correct.
The White House is now a brothel! The military is for losers who can't find a job. Etc etc etc!
By the way, you losers have the nerve to report me when you're all flinging the f word around like it's your job.
You're Classless, rabid baboons.
Did you know Obama declared 13 national emergencies, 11 of which continue to this day.
Presidents declaring national emergencies is not some extraordinary or unusual thing, and Trump is fully within his rights under the law to do so if necessary.
Expect a fight. Gives one the impression that Democrats give a crap about the drugs flowing in.