Articles/Stories
Pitt’s opioids task force releases recommendations
PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE | BY CAROLINE S. ENGELMAYER | JUNE 22, 2018
A University of Pittsburgh opioid task force has recommended that the school mobilize its research and treatment resources to fight addiction through initiatives ranging from partnerships with local medical centers to an on-campus space devoted to student recovery.
Glimmers of hope in the opioid war
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE | BY THE EDITORIAL BOARD | JUNE 20, 2018
The devastating course of the opioid overdose crisis is such that a deep dive into the data usually is necessary to find any progress. But the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council and the American Medical Association have reported developments that might indicate the beginning of a long-term positive trend.
Erie County sues drugmakers over opioid epidemic
GO ERIE | BY MATTHEW RINK | JUNE 19, 2018 Erie County is taking aim at pharmaceutical manufacturers and distributors over their role in the opioid epidemic. A lawsuit filed Monday in Erie County Common Pleas Court claims that several companies deceptively,...
Heroin overdose hospitalizations increased 13 percent statewide in 2017
THE TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT | BY JOHN FINNERTY | JUNE 13, 2018
HARRISBURG – The number of people admitted to the hospital for treatment following heroin overdoses increased almost 13 percent from 2016 to 2017.
With the change, hospitalizations for heroin overdoses hit 1,753 in 2017, up from 1,555 in 2016, according to a report released Tuesday by the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council.
Cambria County’s overdose rate is worst in state, but signs show improvement, doc says
THE TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT | BY DAVID HURST | JUNE 13, 2018 Cambria County’s state-leading overdose hospitalization rate reflects a period – 2016 particularly – when patients were being brought into Conemaugh Memorial Medical Center in overwhelming numbers, sometimes dozens...
One measure shows overdose rates leveling
THE TIMES-TRIBUNE | BY JON O’CONNELL | JUNE 13, 2018
By one measure in the fight against drug addiction, the tables are turning.
Hospital admissions for opioid drug overdoses — that is, from heroin and prescription pain medicine — dropped by 35 percent in Lackawanna County and by 1 percent in Luzerne County from 2016 to 2017, according to data released today by the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council, or PHC4.
Report: Good news, barely, on opioid hospital admissions
THE TIMES LEADER | BY MARK GUYDISH | JUNE 13, 2018
According to a new report, hospitalization for opioid overdoses in Luzerne County dropped from 2016 to 2017. But the actual numbers went from 73 admissions to 72.
The report also shows over both years combined, the overdose admission rate per 100,000 residents was comfortably lower than the state rate: 54.5 admissions per 100,000 locally compared to the state rate of 64.6.
Meeting in Reading focuses on state’s drug abuse crisis
THE READING EAGLE | BY FORD TURNER | JUNE 13, 2018
Orlando Rendon held up a brown plastic container and a pair of blue rubber gloves Wednesday morning to demonstrate what Reading can learn from Philadelphia about operating city parks in the middle of a drug epidemic.
Opioid addiction common in seniors
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE | BY ERIC MARK | JUNE 10, 2018
You are never too old to suffer from addiction, especially addiction to opioids.
That is the message from treatment specialists and professionals at all levels.
The oldest person to die of an overdose in Luzerne County in 2017 was Paul Sorokas, who was 75.
County’s oldest overdose victim in 2017 was 75
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE | BY ERIC MARK | JUNE 10, 2018
Addiction can ruin or end a life at any age.
Paul Sorokas was 75 when he died on April 1, 2017, the oldest person to die from a drug overdose in Luzerne County last year.
Sorokas, a fun-loving but hard-working man known as “Bobo” who lived in Wilkes-Barre most of his life, did physical work, including a long tenure at the manufacturing company InterMetro. He suffered a serious back injury on the job about 25 years ago, according to his younger brother, Richard Sorokas.
National drop in opioid prescribing mirrored in Pennsylvania, doctors’ group says
THE PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE | BY RICH LORD | MAY 31, 2018
The nation, like Pennsylvania, is seeing a drop in opioid prescribing, which the American Medical Association attributed Thursday to “physician leadership.”
The AMA in a release touted a 22 percent drop in the prescribing of opioids from 2013 to 2017 — amounting to 55 million fewer bottles of the addictive narcotics last year, compared to five years ago. The dip from 2016 to 2017 alone was 9 percent, the doctors’ group reported.
Allegheny County Health Department gets $350K grant to combat opioid crisis
TRIBLIVE | BY THERESA CLIFT | MAY 29, 2018
The Hillman Foundation has given a $350,000 grant to the Allegheny County Health Department to help fund the department’s outreach in communities affected by the opioid crisis.
The funds will be used to conduct in-depth interviews to help come up with intervention strategies, and some will be given out as mini grants, a county news release said.
Bucks County to sue Big Pharma over opioid crisis
PHILLY.COM | BY AUBREY WHELAN | MAY 29, 2018
Following a slew of lawsuits against opioid manufacturers by local and state governments across the country, Bucks County officials announced Tuesday that they are filing suit against three opioid distributors and 14 pharmaceutical companies, including Purdue Pharma, the manufacturer of OxyContin.
Fentanyl driving opioid crisis in Berks, nearby counties
THE READING EAGLE | BY FORD TURNER | 04.25.2018
The drug overdose crisis in the seven-county region centered on Berks took 938 lives in 2017, an increase of about 11 percent from the previous year that was fueled by abuse of fentanyl, a synthetic opioid once used primarily to treat chronic or cancer-related pain.
In Opioid Epidemic, Some Cities Strain to Afford OD Antidote
STANDARD SPEAKER | 04.12.2018
BALTIMORE (AP) — On a Baltimore street corner, public health workers hand out a life-saving overdose antidote to residents painfully familiar with the ravages of America’s opioid epidemic. But the training wraps up quickly; all the naloxone inhalers are claimed within 20 minutes.
Burlco pharmacist gets prison for oxycodone prescription fraud
THE INQUIRER | 04.12.2018
A 46-year-old Burlington County pharmacist was sentenced Thursday to 15 years in federal prison for illegally distributing oxycodone for five years from two pharmacies he owned in Medford, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito said.
‘Formulary’ plan prompts deadlock; bill tackles prescriptions for injured workers
THE TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT | 04.06.2018
A Pennsylvania Senate Bill proposes creating state-sanctioned prescription guidelines for workers injured on the job, a move its supporters say will cut down on the amount of opioids prescribed to them.
SRO crowd in Kensington divided on injection site plan, united on need for city action
WHYY | 05.06.2018 As the debate continues to intensify over Philadelphia’s proposal for a supervised injection facility in Philadelphia, a standing-room-only crowd packed a Kensington community center gym Wednesday night to tell Philadelphia City Council members how...
Opioid addiction costs employers $2.6B a year for care
THE PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE | 04.5.2018
A new report shows large employers spent $2.6 billion to treat opioid addiction and overdoses in 2016, an eight-fold increase since 2004. More than half went to treat employees’ children.
The analysis released Thursday by the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation finds such spending cost companies and workers about $26 per enrollee in 2016.
Groups raising funds for Narcan training
THE CITIZENS' VOICE | 05.04.2018 WILKES-BARRE — Local community groups are organizing a basketball tournament to help raise money for Narcan training and drug recovery efforts in Luzerne County. Erik Coolbaugh Foundation and United We Stand, Divided We Fall are...
Pharmacists, EMS using resource cards to help overdose victims
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE | 04.03.2018
Prescription opioid drugs don’t come with a warning label.
They also don’t include a list of local resources if patients find themselves hooked on the highly addictive medicine or worse, face a fatal overdose.
Toddler died from drug overdose after parents left her alone for 22 hours: court records
PENNLIVE | 05.05.2018 GREENCASTLE --At 3 years old, Logan Starliper may be the youngest victim of an illegal drug overdose in Central Pennsylvania in recent history. She's certainly the youngest in Franklin County, according to coroner Jeff Conner.
Jeannette leads Westmoreland in overdose deaths, officials look to reverse trend
TRIBLIVE | 04.03.2018
Jeannette officials have asked the Westmoreland County Drug Overdose Task Force to help them deal with a troubling trend in overdose deaths revealed in the coroner’s analysis of 2017 cases.
The city had 21 fatal overdoses last year, surpassing the county’s largest municipality, Hempfield Township, which had 19. Yet Hempfield has more than 41,300 residents, more than quadruple Jeannette’s 9,300.
Greene County to get addiction navigators through grant, collaboration
OBSERVER-REPORTER | 05.02.2018 WAYNESBURG – When an addict makes the choice that they want to seek treatment, that begins a difficult and complicated journey through a system that can leave them confused and sometimes empty-handed.
Addiction clinic manager charged with drug dealing allowed to remain free, continue working
THE PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE | 04.02.2018
The manager of an opioid addiction treatment clinic with offices in Washington County and West Virginia was arraigned Monday in federal court on charges of distributing drugs and healthcare fraud and allowed to remain free pending trial.
Battling NEPA’s drug crisis, Part II: Mom, daughter run women’s recovery center
THE TIMES-LEADER | 05.01.2018 SWEET VALLEY — Every day, Tee Simpkins and daughter Cleo Lebron have to take a look at the “transportation board” at the Graniteville House of Recovery and figure out the transportation schedule for each of the house’s 20 residents. For...
His family was ‘dismantled’ by addiction. And it can happen to anyone.
PENNLIVE | 03.30.2018
It sounds like the perfect childhood, the one every kid should have. Dad was a blue-collar worker who coached the kids’ baseball teams.
Mom was a homemaker and a stickler for demanding her three sons complete their homework and excel in school. She was involved with the PTA, cheered in the stands at sporting events and led her family to church services.
City joins opioid lawsuit
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE | 03.30.2018
WILKES-BARRE — The city will join other government agencies across the nation in suing drug manufacturers and wholesale distributors that officials claim are responsible for making the opioid epidemic possible by “dumping millions of dollars’ worth of prescription opioids” into the community.
Lackawanna sees surge in babies born addicted to drugs
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE | 03.28.2018
Nearly 3 percent of Lackawanna County infants hospitalized in fiscal years 2016 and 2017 were born addicted to drugs, a new study shows.
Between July 1, 2015 and June 30, 2017, 118 Lackawanna County newborns were hospitalized with neonatal abstinence syndrome — an array of problems that occur in infants exposed to addictive drugs, often opioids, while in the womb.
Specialist tells business community: Addiction ‘cycle’ often begins with legal pain pills
THE TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT | 03.29.2018
Marlene Singer took the message of addiction to the local business community on Wednesday, tracing the pathway from painkillers to heroin to the risk of a fatal overdose.
“Opioids, whether they are prescription pain pills or heroin or any other type of opioid, all work in … the part of the brain that deals with breathing, heart rate, and that’s where it becomes so dangerous,” Singer, a community health and employee wellness coordinator with Conemaugh Health System, told those at a luncheon hosted by the Cambria Regional Chamber of Commerce.
15 deaths a day is horrifying, but that might be undercounting the opioid death toll
THE TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT | 03.29.2018
HARRISBURG – Everyone knows the state’s opioid crisis is bad. But how bad? Inconsistent reporting makes that a frustrating unknown.
State Sen. Gene Yaw, R-Lycoming, wants Pennsylvania to fix that. He has proposed legislation that would require more uniform standards and training and establish a tighter deadline for reporting drug deaths.
Wilkes-Barre announces lawsuit against opioid makers, distributors
THE TIMES LEADER | 03.29.2018
WILKES-BARRE — Following the lead of Luzerne County and other cities and counties nationwide, Wilkes-Barre announced Thursday it is suing five of the largest manufacturers of prescription opioids and their related firms plus three of the largest wholesale drug distributors.
Fox Chapel man’s death linked to anti-diarrheal overdose
PENNLIVE | 03.29.2018
A Fox Chapel man found dead in his home in November died from an overdose of an anti-diarrhea medication that can be used to mimic the high of opioids, medical examiner records show.
Arjun Patel, 29, was pronounced dead Nov. 8. A notice from the Allegheny County Medical Examiner earlier this week lists Patel’s cause of death as loperamide poisoning.
Westmoreland overdose deaths taper off, trend could be regional
TRIBLIVE | 03.28.2018
Westmoreland County Coroner Ken Bacha released the 2017 year-end statistical report Wednesday that shows the county reached the predicted overdose death tally of 193, a new record.
But it is what last year’s records don’t show that has him optimistic: drug deaths are declining.
In Westmoreland County, coroner’s report said 2017 was a record year
THE PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE | 03.28.2018
Westmoreland County has been inundated by the same opioid drug crisis affecting Western Pennsylvania and the rest of the country, according to a report released Wednesday by its coroner’s office.
2 men charged in Montco with ordering deadly opioid carfentanil from China
THE INQUIRER | 03.28.2018
In a drug bust described as the first of its kind in Montgomery County, two men were arrested Monday night and charged with ordering an extremely potent synthetic opioid through the mail from China and distributing it locally, authorities announced Wednesday.
Jamil Chapman, 26, and his nephew Nasai Chapman, 23, of Collingdale, Delaware County, are accused of ordering and distributing fentanyl and its deadlier cousin carfentanil, a narcotic powerful enough to tranquilize elephants. Prosecutors said that 300 grams of fentanyl were seized and that the pair could be linked to 400 to 500 grams of carfentanil shipped to the United States from China.
Johnny was going to check out the meeting about safe injection sites. He didn’t get there | Mike Newall
THE INQUIRER | 03.28.2018
The outreach worker went to the train bridge on Tulip Street on Friday morning, looking for people who needed to be heard. People in addiction.
She saw the thin man in a gray hoodie by the end of the tunnel, sweeping the sidewalk with single-minded intent. He called himself Johnny.
Safe injection site to get airing in Philly neighborhood most scarred by opioids
THE INQUIRER | 03.27.2018
In Kensington, this much is clear: No other neighborhood in Philadelphia has seen more overdose deaths, or more visible suffering amid a city opioid epidemic that claimed an estimated 1,200 lives in 2017. Along with neighboring Fairhill, it occupies less than 2 percent of Philadelphia’s land area, but 18 percent of all city overdoses occurred in that small space, according to an Inquirer analysis of city data.
Schools can be first defense against addiction
PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE | 03.26.2018
Spenser Flowers went from homecoming king to overdose victim in 27 months. At the Hampton Township School District, his death hammered home the reality that even if there’s no sign of pills or stamp bags in the halls or bleachers, graduates will soon run into opioids, some will try them, and a few will die.
“You’re haunted by that: Someone so young, dying from something that could’ve been prevented,” said Hampton’s high school principal, Marguerite Imbarlina. “That was somewhat of a wake-up call. … We need to try every avenue, because every kid is different.”
Parents and student peers can help prevent high school opioid use
THE PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE | 03.26.2018
Parents can find reasons for hope, and fear, in the latest research on teens and drugs. They can also find more nuanced do’s and don’ts than their predecessors typically got during the “Just Say No” era.
Take 1,000 kids ages 12 to 17, and chances are you’ll find just six opioid abusers, according to research out of Penn State Health Children’s Hospital, published this month in the magazine Pediatrics. But in the 18-25 group, the prevalence of opioid addiction is roughly double that.
Foundation hosts event to combat addiction at home, in schools
THE TIMES-TRIBUNE | 03.23.2018
MAYFIELD — Standing among a group of parents at Mayfield Elementary School, Carrie Chase read a letter from her 7-year-old great-niece about the effects of addiction on families.
“Mommy, when you go away, I feel sad and a little bit mad. I wish you will stop doing bad things like going to jail, or do drugs, or when you don’t play with me when you come home from jail,” Chase read.
Outreach group knows all too well the hardships of addiction
BUCKS COUNTY COURIER TIMES | BY MARION CALLAHAN
Parents from Bucks County’s How to Save a Life Foundation go to Kensington at least twice a month to rescue drug users from the streets and get them into treatment. Since losing her son from addiction in 2006, Marti Hottenstein and her group have helped dozens of users find recovery.
Opioid epidemic could spark HIV outbreak, health experts fear
TRIB LIVE | BY MEGAN GUZA
Pennsylvania’s widespread opioid epidemic, combined with controversial drug paraphernalia laws and the lack of needle exchange programs in rural areas, could spark a devastating and costly HIV outbreak, health experts fear.
HIV outbreaks have hit several parts of the country, including rural Scott County, Indiana, which could cost the state more than $100 million.
Opioid epidemic could spark HIV outbreak, health experts fear
TRIBLIVE | 03.18.2018
Pennsylvania’s widespread opioid epidemic, combined with controversial drug paraphernalia laws and the lack of needle exchange programs in rural areas, could spark a devastating and costly HIV outbreak, health experts fear.
HIV outbreaks have hit several parts of the country, including rural Scott County, Indiana, which could cost the state more than $100 million.
Fentanyl-cocaine combo taking lives in Western Pa.
TRIB-LIVE | BY CHUCK BIEDKA
A deadly blend of cocaine and the powerful opioid fentanyl is appearing on Western Pennsylvania streets and autopsy tables, according to police, coroners and other experts.
The combination is a modern “speedball,” with stimulant and depressant drugs like the stuff that killed actor John Belushi in 1982 and thousands of others, said a UPMC addiction medicine specialist, Dr. Antoine Douaihy.
Hospital volunteers soothe newborns withdrawing from opiates
OBSERVER-REPORTER | BY TRISTA THURSTON
PITTSBURGH – On a chilly Valentine’s Day morning, Beverly Thornton dons gloves and a hospital gown and picks up a baby she’s been soothing for the last few hours. She’s wrapping up her three-hour shift as a “cuddler” in the neonatal intensive care unit at UPMC-Magee-Womens Hospital.
Grandparents caring for grandchildren as parents battle addiction
OBSERVER-REPORTER | BY KAREN MANSFIELD
At a time when they thought they would be spending their retirement traveling or pursuing hobbies, a growing number of grandparents find themselves instead raising grandchildren, a consequence of the opioid epidemic.
Across America, about 2.7 million grandparents have been thrown into the role of day-to-day caregiver – changing diapers, making lunches, carpooling and attending PTA meetings – because their adult children are struggling with opioid addiction.
Delivering death: Getting tougher on opioid dealers of all kinds
THE PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE | 03.08.2018
When a bullet-riddled body turns up in a gutter, there’s no question that a police investigation will follow. When a person dies of a drug overdose, however, police often dismiss it as a case of self-harm and close the file. That’s a mindset that should change so that victims’ families get justice and so murderers — make no mistake, dealers in fatal overdoses are murderers — get taken off the streets.
Group teaches local students about dangers of drug abuse
THE CITIZEN’S VOICE | BILL WELLOCK
WILKES-BARRE — Amid flashing lights and Korn’s “Freak on a Leash” came the sobering stories of opioid addiction: records numbers of overdoses, a couple who overdosed with their children in their home, a pregnant woman charged after using drugs.
It was the beginning of a presentation from DJ Choices, a group that teaches students about the dangers of drug abuse.
Pa. emergency rooms see 81% spike in opioid overdoses, CDC reports
LEHIGH VALLEY LIVE | SARA K. SATULLO
New data released by the CDC Tuesday shows America’s opioid epidemic is growing at an alarming rate and Pennsylvania is one of the hardest hit areas.
Nationally, in just one year, opioid overdoses jumped by 30 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control report.