Image Source: economist.com
PICTURE a heroin addict. “A bum sitting under a bridge with a needle in his arm, robbing houses to feed his addiction,” is what many people might imagine, believes Cynthia Scudo. That image may have been halfway accurate when heroin first ravaged America’s inner cities in the 1960s and 1970s. But Ms Scudo, a smartly dressed young grandmother from a middle-class Denver suburb, knows that these days it is not always like that. Until not so long ago, she was a heroin addict herself.
The face of heroin use in America has changed utterly. Forty or fifty years ago heroin addicts were overwhelmingly male, disproportionately black, and very young (the average age of first use was 16). Most came from poor inner-city neighbourhoods. These days, the average user looks more like Ms Scudo. More than half are women, and 90% are white. The drug has crept into the suburbs and the middle classes. And although users are still mainly young, the age of initiation has risen: most first-timers are in their mid-20s, according to a study led by Theodore Cicero of Washington University in St Louis.
The spread of heroin to a new market of relatively affluent, suburban whites has allowed the drug to make a comeback, after decades of decline. Over the past six years the number of annual users has almost doubled, from 370,000 in 2007 to 680,000 in 2013. Heroin is still rare compared with most other drugs: cannabis, America’s favourite (still mostly illegal) high, has nearly 50 times as many users, for instance. But heroin’s resurgence means that, by some measures, it is more popular than crack cocaine, the bogeyman of the 1980s and 1990s. Its increased popularity in America contrasts strongly with Europe, where the number of users has fallen by a third in the past decade. What explains America’srelapse?
A shot in the arm
But they aren’t. In 2012 prescription painkillers accounted for 16,000 deaths—nearly four out of every ten fatal drug overdoses in America. As the toll grew, some states tightened up the law. In many places doctors must now check databases to make sure the patient has not already been prescribed painkillers by another clinic. Prescriptions have been cut down to as little as a single pill, to reduce the supply of unfinished packets. “Pill mills”, clinics that churned out prescriptions with no questions asked, have been shut down. And drug manufacturers have made their medicines harder to abuse: the latest OxyContin pills, when crushed, turn into a gloop that cannot easily be snorted or dissolved for injection.
The Mexican wave
In the past few years the Mexicans have upped their game. One of the many unintended consequences of Mexico’s war on organised crime in urban hotspots, such as Ciudad Juárez, was that the army was diverted from poppy eradication in the countryside. Farmers in the Sierra Madre made the most of this: by 2009 cultivation was ten times higher than in 2000. Although production has fallen back in the past few years, Mexico is now the world’s third-biggest producer of opium, after Afghanistan and Myanmar.
America’s police have seen the impact. Seizures of heroin at the border with Mexico have risen from 560kg (1,230lb) in 2008 to about 2,100kg last year. And the smugglers have become bolder. “Three or four years ago, 5lb was big. Now sometimes we’re finding 20lb,” says Kevin Merrill, the assistant special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration on the outskirts of Denver.
The low transport costs faced by Mexican traffickers, who need only drive from Sinaloa to the border, mean that their heroin is far cheaper than the Colombian or Asian sort. A gram of pure heroin in America now costs about $400, less than half the price, in real terms, that it cost in the 1980s. And whereas much of the heroin in the past was of the “black tar” variety, which is usually injected, there is a trend towards brown heroin, which lends itself better to snorting and smoking. That matters to novice heroin users, who may be skittish about needles. “I somehow thought that if I didn’t inject it, I wasn’t a heroin addict,” says Ms Scudo, who smoked it instead.
Now that heroin addiction is no longer a disease only of the urban poor, however, attitudes are changing. The Obama administration’s latest national drug strategy, published in July, criticised “the misconception that a substance-use disorder is a personal moral failing rather than a brain disease”. It called for greater access to naloxone, an antidote that can reverse the effects of heroin overdose, and backed state-level “good Samaritan” laws, which give immunity to people who call 911 to help someone who is overdosing. Needle-exchange services, which have cut rates of hepatitis and HIV among drug users in Europe, are expanding. These programmes are easier for politicians to sell now that heroin addiction is no longer just the “bum under the bridge”.
Joe Schrank and his team at the Core Company NYC help drug addicts recover and regain their lives through specialized intervention programs. Read more insights on drug addiction and recovery here.
addiction doesn't care if you're white or black tho.
ReplyDeleteaddiction requires a lot of money, but some can still afford to buy one.
ReplyDelete