Heroin is so prevalent in Ohio it is “falling out of the sky,” according to new state data that finds children as young as 13 are now starting on the drug, considered a cheap substitute for prescription painkillers.
Regions across the state saw increases in heroin abuse during the past six months, with availability in Cleveland considered at epidemic levels, according to a report released this month by the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services.
Participants in the bi-annual survey, including addicts and drug abuse counselors, say the top reason for the increase comes as people addicted to painkillers “realize that heroin is cheaper and easier to obtain,” the report said.
Ohio has struggled with soaring rates of addiction to prescription painkillers, with a record number of fatal overdoses in 2010.
The report also says recent changes to the painkiller Oxycontin meant to reduce its abuse also has turned painkiller addicts to heroin.
“Heroin remains highly available in all regions,” according to the report. “The general sentiment among participants was that heroin is, `falling out of the sky.'”
A separate report released this month by the Ohio Department of Health cited 338 heroin-involved deaths in 2010, or one in every five drug overdose deaths in the state.
The state’s “hotspot” for heroin abuse is Lancaster, according to the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services. At The Recovery Center in Lancaster, about 30 miles southeast of Columbus, most of the 360 patients are addicted to painkillers or heroin. Most heroin addicts started with painkillers, said CEO Trisha Saunders.
“They say, `I never thought I’d switch from taking a pill to putting a needle in my arm,'” Saunders said Tuesday.
In Toledo, the age of first-time heroin use “reportedly occurs in users as young as 13-14 years,” according to the report.
That corresponds with a “frightening” drop in the age of heroin addicts at Maryhaven in Columbus, one of Ohio’s biggest treatment centers, said president and CEO Paul Coleman. Maryhaven treats 132 patients under age 18, many addicted to painkillers but some also to heroin, Coleman said.
The latest Justice Department report on drug abuse finds heroin availability and abuse increasing as Mexican drug traffickers increase production.
The 2011 National Drug Threat Assessment also finds that some of the new heroin users are prescription drug addicts “switching to heroin because it is cheaper.”
Another government report finds heroin abuse on the rise nationally.
Heroin availability is increasing in Chicago and in nearby Lake County in northern Indiana, according to a 2011 National Drug Intelligence Center report.
In Michigan, heroin trafficking and abuse are now nearly equal to cocaine sales and abuse, according to the center, which also found painkiller addicts switching to heroin.
In central California, treatment providers report abusers of prescription drugs are switching to heroin as they increase their tolerance to the painkillers, “and seek a more euphoric high or when the availability of heroin is greater,” according to the NDIC.
In some places, though, the trend is reversed. The Seminole County Sheriff’s Department in Florida reported that the demand for heroin declined as many former abusers turn to prescription painkillers, according to the NDIC. Florida has been home to numerous so-called “pill mills,” which distribute painkillers for cash, often with few questions asked.