It’s clear the world is having trouble controlling its use
of opioid painkillers, with overdose deaths rising drastically in recent years
in the United States, Pennsylvania and Berks County – but not in Southwestern
Berks County.
In Berks, 64 people died of drug overdoses in 2014; and 69
died in 2015. Berks has had 22 heroin-related deaths this year through June,
the Reading Eagle reported Monday.
But Southwestern Berks County has avoided many opioid
deaths. The area – Lower Heidelberg, South Heidelberg, Sinking
Spring, Wernersville -- had no opioid-related deaths in 2014 or so far this
year, according to the Berks County coroner’s office. Drug information before 2014
was not stored in spreadsheets and is not feasibly searched.
In 2015, three people died of opioid-related causes in
Southwestern Berks. A 31-year-old man died in his Sinking Spring home of an
accidental overdose of Oxycontin.
Also that year, two men, ages 24 and 33, took heroin and
fentanyl in the Wernersville Community Corrections Center in South Heidelberg
and died of accidental overdoses. One died at the facility; one died at Reading
Hospital.
In 2015, two other inmates of the state-run correctional
center were charged with having heroin. One was caught selling heroin in
Reading on work-release. The other had 36 packets of heroin in the center.
In other local opioid-abuse-related news, the Caron
Foundation, another South Heidelberg institution, plans to borrow as much as $28.5 million to help build a 21-bed treatment facility at its campus near
Wernersville.
Local police chiefs say opioids have not been a big problem
in Southwestern Berks, nothing like a spike in abuse in the Topton area. At
least five people from the Brandywine Heights area died from drug
overdoses in early 2014.
In Pennsylvania, almost 3,400 people died of overdoses in
2015, up from about 2,740 in 2014 and about 2,425 in 2013. That’s a 40 percent
increase over two years. Most involved opioids – highly euphoric and highly
addictive painkillers such as heroin, fentanyl,Vicodin and Oxycontin that are
based on opium.
Many people become addicted to opiates after using
painkillers prescribed by doctors. Some steal the pills, which have saturated
the United States, from family member’s medicine chests. As their tolerance for
the drug increases, many users switch to heroin, which is often cheaper and
easier to find, as regulations and wiser doctors are tightening diverted
supplies of prescription pills. Heroin from Mexico has become stronger and
cheaper, and is often adulterated with other opioids like fentanyl, which can
create a fatal potency.
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