Chicago has the worst heroin problem in U.S.
Press Release 2010-07
There seems to be one thing that Chicago is beating the
nation now and that is Heroin-Related Emergency Room Admissions.
Indeed, drug abuse and addiction is including the city's
suburbs, whites and teens in its list of victims.
Chicago has the worst heroin addiction problem than
any other metro area in the nation, as the new study
by Roosevelt University The Illinois Consortium on Drug
Policy shows.
The 23,000 mentions of heroin in emergency room records
were nearly 50 percent higher than in New York City,
the second-ranking metropolitan area.
Admissions for heroin among females, males, individuals
21 and older, and African Americans is the highest in
Chicago, as well.
The percentage of arrestees testing positive for heroin
is the highest in in Cook County Jail also. Despite
the popular belief, arrestees testing positive for heroin
were also more likely to be white (41 percent), compared
to African American (25.3 percent) or Latino (24.3 percent).
"Chicago has one of the worst - if not the worst
- heroin problems in the nation," said Kane-Willis,
one of the authors of the new report.
Deaths from heroin overdoses increased in Lake County
by 130 percent from 2000 to 2009. McHenry County saw
an increase of 150 percent in three years, and in Will
County, heroin deaths doubled in just two years. And
while heroin deaths in Cook County have decreased 16
percent over the period 1998 to 2008, heroin- related
deaths increased 40 percent among one demographic: white
women.
Kane-Willis told CBS Station WBBM that heroin users
are more white, more female, and much younger than is
the common perception.
Heroin is also the most common illegal substance for
which Illinoisans seek public treatment - more prevalent
than cocaine and marijuana - and is second only to alcohol.
African Americans accounted for 74 percent of those
aged 40 to 49 discharged from hospitals for heroin.
However, a growing number of users are white suburban
teens.
Of those in publicly funded treatment for heroin in
2008, nearly 70 percent under age 18 were white.
"It's cheaper to buy heroin than to go to the
movies, to buy a movie ticket. That's really frightening,"
Kate Mahoney, executive director of PEER Services, told
WBBM.
To combat these problems, the report's authors make
several policy recommendations, including:
• Comprehensive drug education for young people;
• Increased funding for treatment (there have
been service cuts in all types of alcohol and drug treatment);
• Increased availability of syringes and syringe
exchange programs, to prevent the spread of blood-borne
pathogens, such as hepatitis or HIV;
• Support overdose prevention and Naloxone administration
efforts; and
• Provide limited protection for 911 callers reporting
a drug overdose and requesting emergency assistance.
Source: CBS, June 29, 2010 based on the
report:
Roosevelt University
The Illinois Consortium on Drug Policy
Co-authored by:
Stephanie Schmitz
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