Credit: Jessie Czopek

In the popular imagination, heroin lives in dark, damp Seattle alleys or dingy Edinburgh flats, the preferred vice of morose musicians or jaded junkies.
But increasingly, experts say, the dangerous drug is coursing through the veins of well-adjusted, middle class youth, right here in sunny Central Oregon.

โ€œThe people who are becoming addicted to heroin is a different group than one would normally expect,โ€ says Rick Treleaven, Executive Director of Bend-based BestCare Treatment Services. โ€œThe people weโ€™re seeing from heroin are really from more functional families, who have an education and should be going to college. But theyโ€™ve gone down this path.โ€

And, that sentiment is backed up by numbers: In the past five years, the Deschutes County District Attorneyโ€™s Office has seen a more than seven-fold increase in the number of heroin chargesโ€”jumping from 22 in 2009 to 171 in 2014. Alone, that five-year increase is dramatic, but even more telling is that the problem only seems to be intensifying: In the single year from 2013 to 2014, the number of charges by the DA relating to heroin possession nearly doubled.

And, these numbers likely represent only the tip of the iceberg for total usage, points out Assistant DA Steve Gunnels.

โ€œPolice often discover heroin only when the user has overdosed and paramedics are called to try to revive them,โ€ Gunnels explains. While itโ€™s not uncommon for drug users to engage in petty crime to help fund their habit, heroin users, as a group, are less prone to violent and erratic behavior than, say, methamphetamine users. Moreover, if a heroin user dies, he or she obviously wonโ€™t be charged with possession and, if they donโ€™t OD, they arenโ€™t likely to cross paths with police.

Yet, although the full scope of heroin use in Deschutes County remains unknown, across the boardโ€”from law enforcement to the District Attorneyโ€™s Office to treatment providersโ€”experts are troubled by what they agree is a dramatic increase in use in just the past few years.

Portrait of an addict

They say the typical heroin user is between 16 and 30, but Rimrock Trails Adolescent Treatment Services, one of the four primary treatment centers in the region, is seeing even younger addicts.

And while itโ€™s tempting to assume that those ensnared by heroin are young people on societyโ€™s margins, without adult support or supervision, wrestling with the demons of early childhood trauma, Treleaven says that notion doesnโ€™t match the people heโ€™s seeing in BestCareโ€™s treatment programs.

โ€œTheir family problems are no more traumatizing than most peopleโ€™s family problems. Theyโ€™re not the people coming out of foster homes, theyโ€™re not the people who have been beaten and abused. I think theyโ€™re starting out wanting to have a good time,โ€ Treleaven says. โ€œIโ€™m 55, 30 years older than many of these folks. It has struck me that they are long removed from the heroin epidemics that we saw in โ€™60s, โ€™70s and early โ€™80s in this country. So they walk into a heroin addiction without really being cognizant of how devastating a drug it can be.โ€

And itโ€™s not just overdoses that potentially await addicts, he points out. Other health issues are highly correlated with intravenous drug use, including hepatitis and HIV.

โ€œHepatitis C is rampant now. If people survive youโ€™re just going to have a lot of people with liver transplants or dying of liver disease,โ€ Treleaven says. โ€œWe have yet to see in the folks weโ€™re seeing a real uptick in HIVโ€”itโ€™s there, we have people who have it. If people are sharing needles and getting hepatitis C, HIV goes along with that, just a lower amount.โ€

Deschutes County has a needle exchange program, but Treleaven says it needs to be stronger and better funded. Currently, IV drug users can exchange used needles and other supplies for clean ones in Bend and Redmond. According to County Health Educator Susan McCreedy, these services are currently available on a drop-in basis, but the Bend site hopes to move to 11 am to 3 pm on Tuesdays starting in March, to provide more in-depth support.

โ€œUnfortunately, the general public views it as helping addicts, and so politicians respond to that and donโ€™t fund that,โ€ Treleaven explains.

He also points to the need for another form of assistance aimed at reducing the harm caused by heroinโ€”naloxone (Narcan). Treleaven says efforts are beginning to make the medication more widely available in Portland, where heroin is more embedded in the cultural fabric, but local efforts have yet to take hold.

The roots of the problem, he explains, are much more far-reaching than those of other street drugs, often originating in the rampant prescription of pain pills, many which share the same opiate base as heroin.

โ€œCentral Oregon is still far too reliant on giving out opiate pain killers for chronic pain,โ€ Treleaven says. โ€œI think opiate pain killers are wonderful for acute pain and many are problematic for chronic pain. As a community we have begun to talk about widely providing alternatives to prescriptions as tools to manage chronic pain.โ€

Counselors point out that doctors arenโ€™t necessarily prescribing painkillers to teens, but that youth find access to the painkillers from their parentsโ€™ or friendsโ€™ medicine cabinets. According to 2013 survey results released by The Partnership at Drugfree.org and MetLife Foundation, one in four teens reported misusing or abusing a prescription medicationโ€”a 33 percent increase over five years. And more than a quarter of those surveyed said they believe itโ€™s safer to get high off prescription drugs than street drugs.

โ€œUntil you have alternatives to chronic pain, then the chronic pain world will continue to feed a recreational market and out of that youโ€™ll get heroin markets,โ€ declares Treleaven.

A dangerous game

โ€œHeroin and nicotine have a similar rate of addiction,โ€ Treleaven says, explaining that a monthly user has a 95 percent chance of becoming addicted. By comparison, only about 10 percent of monthly drinkers become alcoholics. โ€œNot many people are able to use heroin for very long without becoming dependent on it. It becomes a very difficult drug for people to quit.โ€

Because heroin withdrawal comes with such unpleasant side effects, Treleaven says itโ€™s one of the few drugs he doesnโ€™t recommend quitting cold turkey. Those coming off the powerful drug may experience extreme sweating, vomiting, diarrhea, extreme muscle and bone pain, crying, and other uncomfortable effects. When more heroin seems to be the only โ€œcure,โ€ addicts face sometimes insurmountable temptation to use.

For young users, this come-down may be harder to avoid, since conventional detox programs are not readily available to teens and children.

โ€œThere is no medically managed treatment available for opiate-dependent youth,โ€ says Erica Fuller-Hewitt of Rimrock, a two-decade-old treatment center in the region exclusively for teens. โ€œWe are in the process of exploring the feasibility of developing a medically managed treatment regimenโ€”often referred to as detoxโ€”for opiate-addicted youth in our residential program.โ€

But sadly, some users never get the chance to try detoxing. Compounding the drugโ€™s inherent pull, Treleaven says, is the fact that many users are naรฏve to dynamics of dependency, often with deadly consequences.

โ€œThe danger for heroin, of course, is if you go to jail or treatment and get clean off it for a month or more, your tolerance will go down. You have people who relapse and theyโ€™ll use the amount they were using before and that can kill them,โ€ Treleaven says. โ€œWeโ€™re seeing some heroin overdose deaths and far more near deaths,โ€ he laments.

A national crisis

The trends emerging in Central Oregon are not unique. Heroin is making a comeback across the country, mostly concentrated in larger cities, but also devastating small towns.

Nationally, the estimated number of annual heroin overdose deathsโ€”about 6,000 in 2012โ€”has now far surpassed the peak of 3,500 annually in the 1970s, when Vietnam War vets were returning to the United States with a nagging stowaway.

Places that never saw heroin five years ago are now struggling to deal with the presence of an incisive intruder. In its January issue, GQ magazine profiled a heroin dealer in Laramie, Wyoming (population 31,814), exploring how a business-minded young man with an opiate addiction born out of a legitimately prescribed use of painkillers helped blindside the small city. And last March, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called the increasing number of deaths to heroin and prescription painkillers an โ€œurgent public health crisis.โ€

โ€œBetween 2006 and 2010, heroin overdose deaths increased by 45 percent,โ€ Holder said in a video released by his office. โ€œScientific studies, federal, state and local investigations, addiction treatment providers, and victims reveal that the cycle of heroin abuse commonly begins with prescription opiate abuse. The transition toโ€”and increase inโ€”heroin abuse is a sad but not unpredictable symptom of the significant increase in prescription drug abuse weโ€™ve seen over the past decade.โ€

Because the drug trade is, at its core, a business, experts say drug dealers and producers are picking up on shifts in supply and demandโ€”that is, the reduction in meth ingredients and the increase in opiate addicts.

Lt. Paul Kansky, with the Central Oregon Drug Enforcement team, says that efforts to curb the production of methamphetamine by restricting the sale of Sudafed locally and intercepting the trafficking of the ingredient internationally has put a pinch on the meth trade.

โ€œMeth is still our primary issue drug,โ€ Kansky admits. However, he says, โ€œDrug dealers are a businessโ€ฆif they can get access to heroin, they push heroin.โ€

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Erin was a writer and editor at the Source from 2013 to 2016.

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2 Comments

  1. Seems like most doctors treat these days treat their patients as drug-addicts, even when they are seeking treatment for acute injuries. It’s not surprising that treating people like drug addicts and turning them away from legal medicine results in increased illegal drug use.

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