Gov. Tomblin to Hold Substance Abuse Summit in Martinsburg

With President Obama’s visit to Charleston just two short weeks ago, people and organizations across the state have responded to the President’s call to fight drugs and overdose deaths in West Virginia.

On Wednesday, Governor Tomblin continues this fight and travels to Martinsburg to host a summit with law enforcement and the community on substance abuse in the area.

Back in April, Senator Shelley Moore Capito visited Martinsburg to host a Drug Prevention Summit. During her visit, much of the community expressed concern about Berkeley County’s lack of treatment facilities and the rate at which heroin is trafficked throughout the county.

Berkeley County holds the number two spot for most heroin overdose deaths in the state, following Cabell County.

Now, Governor Earl Ray Tomblin visits Martinsburg to host his own summit on substance abuse and plans to take a comprehensive look at the state’s efforts to combat this problem in the Eastern Panhandle.

Berkeley County Sheriff Kenny Lemaster says he hopes the governor will bring new ideas to the table.

“There are things we can start doing with education; educating, you know within out school systems about the drugs, educating programs outside the school system, trying to help set up addiction facilities, and then also give us the resources to combat this, and you know allow the police to continue their fight to curb the continuous stream of drugs into our state,” Lemaster said.

Governor Tomblin’s Substance Abuse Summit will be held at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, November 4 at the Berkeley County Sheriff’s Department in Martinsburg.

Obama Begins Drug Addiction Prevention Conversation In West Virginia

In West Virginia, the number of heroin overdoses has increased almost five-fold since 2010. So today, President Obama will visit West Virginia to host a community discussion about what’s needed to help prevent and stop drug addiction across the U.S.

It’s not exactly clear why West Virginia has had such a problem with drug abuse. There are a few factors — high rates of poverty and unemployment. Also, some addicts grew up in families where people used drugs. That’s what happened to Ashley Counts.

“My mom she started out…she was on crack. And I mean that was hard, and I guess just seeing her use, she made it look fun. And that’s when it all began,” said Counts.

Counts is 24 and has dyed burgundy hair. On this day she sits inside an imposing stone courthouse — because after crack, she moved on to prescription pills, and then to heroin.

“The high was just extraordinary to me.”

When she was arrested for heroin possession, Counts could have gone to prison for years. Instead, she was chosen for a diversion program focused on treatment. But there was a problem… all of the rehab clinics were full. So she waited in jail for a space to open up for five months. Her three children were sent to live with her grandfather.

"These aren't hardened criminals we're talking about. These are fathers. These are mothers. These are somebody's children, somebody's brother and sister."- Travis Zimmerman, who was Counts' probation officer.

Because of the backlog , many addicts in West Virginia never get help at all, says Doctor Edward Eskew, an addiction specialist in Charleston.

“When they are willing to try to change their lives and try to get help we have a really difficult time providing that help in a timely fashion here,” Eskew said.

State officials says about 60,000 people are seeking some sort of addiction treatment. But West Virginia only has enough facilities to help 15,000.

Even some in law enforcement think more addicts should get treatment, not prison.

Travis Zimmerman, who was Ashley Counts’ probation officer, recognizes the humanity of the situation. “These aren’t hardened criminals we’re talking about. These are fathers. These are mothers. These are somebody’s children, somebody’s brother and sister.”

Zimmerman works with addicts he sounds more like a counselor than a cop. Studies show when addicts get treatment, fewer return to crime. During his visit to West Virginia today, President Obama will talk about the need for judges and police officers to partner with substance abuse organizations to steer addicts away from drugs.

That’s exactly what helped Ashley Counts get clean and stay clean for 18 months now.

“They tell you wait for the miracle. Then you come to realize that you are the miracle. Look at what you went through in your life. People just need to step back and look at it. Look how grateful they are for the things they do have still. And that it’s not too late.”

A few months ago Counts got her GED — and regained custody of her kids. She’s also engaged and just gave birth to a healthy baby girl named Amelia. 

Addiction Action Plan Launched in North-Central W.Va.

U.S. District Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld, II, just announced the launch of an organized effort to combat addiction problems in Marion, Monongalia and Harrison counties: an Addiction Action Plan. It’s an extension of an initiative that began in the Northern Panhandle late last year in response to a resurgence of heroin use in the region.

“We have partnered with thought-leaders in a lot of different areas to try to come up with a multidiscipline approach to this,” Ihlenfeld said.

Ihlenfeld’s office is collaborating with judges, lawmakers, education officials, health care practitioners, members of the media, and business leaders to tackle the region’s raging drug problems.

The Scene of the Overdose

He says one big change that’s come of the collaboration is how an overdose scene is handled.

“Just within the past couple years, an overdose scene was treated as a medical incident. An ambulance was called and the person taken away.”

That’s not the case anymore. Now a member of a drug task force is called to the scene to conduct an investigation. Cellphones and drug paraphernalia are collected as well as needles for analysis and anything else that can help definitively determine the cause of death, down to the substance, and where that substance came from.

And laws have changed. Now, if someone dies because of a drug you helped supply…  

“…the penalties are significant,” Ihlenfeld said. “It’s 20 years to life if you deliver a drug that causes somebody else to die.”

Assisting the Addicted

But the Addiction Action Plan isn’t just about identifying and practicing more sophisticated and targeted prosecution.

“We recognized years ago that while it’s important to prosecute and investigate and incarcerate the drug traffickers, we need to do more with the users to try and decrease the demand for this product.”

Ihlenfeld’s office has been advocating for more treatment facilities and more ways of reaching out to community members who might be struggling.

“We have started in the Northern Panhandle by putting together and launching a website called drugfreeov.com. It’s a one-stop-shop to find anything that might be available where they live either for themselves or for anybody that they might know. ”

Recommendations for the Addiction Action Plan committees in north-central West Virginia include adopting similar online resources.

Prevention

The plan also focuses on prevention efforts, largely by organizing presentations in schools.

“The feedback we get is always the greatest at the youngest age, 10 and 11,” Ihlenfeld said of the school visits he’s had so far. “They aren’t afraid to ask questions in front of their peers.”

Ihlenfeld believes it’s important to talk with kids as soon as they are able to comprehend concepts like heroin and drugs, addiction, and pitfalls in life that can lead to these dangerous scenarios.

Corporate Cooperation

Ihlenfeld is also focused on economic issues. Businesses have a hard time, he says, finding applicants in a workforce marred with drug addiction. Meetings are underway with business owners. Ihlenfeld says it behooves all parties to actively be a part of the solution and for business owners, that means considering all applicants — even those who battle addiction problems.

“A lot of these folks do want to work, they want to get their lives back on track,” Ihlenfeld said.

He says it’s not only an investment in the community but also in the future of the community, like one business owner in Indianapolis who hires felons almost exclusively.

“Hundreds of thousands of dollars every year go towards child support because they’re earning a wage, he’s withholding, by court order. If you don’t care about the convicted felon, think about the children and what you’re doing for them. Hopefully that child won’t repeat the mistakes made by father or mother because he has the support he needs.”

Collaborations are also underway with building and construction unions. Officials from Ihlenfeld’s office in Wheeling report that very productive meetings and meaningful steps are being taken in the Northern Panhandle as the result of these collaborations. Similar initiatives have been recommended for the action plan in north-central West Virginia.

A full report, including recommendations and potential outlines for the action plan in Marion, Monongalia and Harrison counties are set to be made public this week. Plans are in place to meet again in several months to discuss progress in the region and to extend an action plan into the Eastern Panhandle.

Four Seasons Recovery Center Celebrates Opening

A much anticipated alternative for addiction recovery is now a reality in southern West Virginia. The Four Seasons Recovery Center in Mercer County is…

A much anticipated alternative for addiction recovery is now a reality in southern West Virginia. The Four Seasons Recovery Center in Mercer County is part of the West Virginia Justice Reinvestment Act. 

State, federal and local representatives as well as participants on Wednesday packed the dining hall of the newly renovated school to celebrate the new option for addiction treatment in the region.

The ceremony opened with a prayer followed by several speakers including Mercer County Circuit Court Judge Omar Aboulhosn.  He says he’s glad there’s have an alternative to incarceration.

“There are other cases in which the safety of the community is not an issue. It’s the individual needs are the issue and those appropriate cases this is going to give us a local option,” Oboulhosn said.
 

Patients are referred to the non-medical detox facility and qualify for the Four Seasons program after a referral from the court system.

The facility is run by recovering addicts themselves and utilizes a 12 step program.
 

Four Seasons Director Terry Danielson is also a recovering addict and has been clean since November 2011. Danielson says the ceremony is nice and  he appreciates the community’s recognition but he knows his work to help people in the region is just beginning.

 

Right now, the facility in Bluefield can house 20 men. The state plans to double the amount of beds in the second year and provide space for 60 men in year three. Danielson is also tasked with raising funds to remain open after the money from the state runs out. The Justice Reinvestment Act covers the next three years.

Danielson’s story of addiction as part of our heroin series, “The Needle and the Damage Done.”

 

Vivitrol: Will the Medication Help Curb Opioid Abuse in W.Va.?

In the world of medication-assisted substance abuse treatment, there are three prescription drugs that are the most widely known: methadone, Suboxone and Vivitrol.

Traditional Opioid Agonists

Methadone and Suboxone have been the most widely used drugs in addiction therapy in West Virginia. Both are synthetic opioid-based medications that react with opioid receptors in the brain just as heroin or prescription narcotics would. These drugs are often used to wean people off of illicit drugs like heroin or prescription painkillers like oxycodone.

Dr. Erika Pallie works at Valley Alliance Treatment Services, a private medication-assisted treatment clinic in Morgantown, has just started using Suboxone for treatment, but she most often prescribes methadone.

“So how it works as a medication-assisted treatment is by replacing the drugs that they’re used to and you very gradually increase the dose until the patient is no longer in withdrawal and their cravings are blunted,” she said of methadone treatment.

The problem with methadone, Pallie said, is its bad reputation. Many people hear the name and think about its illegal use on the street, or the doctors who have been arrested for passing out prescriptions. Pallie agreed, it is sometimes sold illegally, but that doesn’t mean the treatment option should be discounted.

“The big complaint I hear is you’re just trading one drug for another,” she said, “which is a very judgmental approach to it and it’s coming from an abstinence-based philosophy, which doesn’t really work that well.

“I think that one thing that’s really important is that people need to realize that methadone clinics actually help people.”

Still, there are other barriers to drugs like methadone or Suboxone. For instance, addicts who choose those treatments must initially be supervised when they take the medication, meaning they have to go to a clinic every day to both receive and take the drugs.

A New Treatment Option

Vivitrol is an opioid antagonist. Taken just once a month through injection, the drug enters an addict’s system and coats the opioid receptors in the brain. That prevents an addict from feeling the high that comes with using heroin or prescription narcotics.

While Vivitrol has been used clinically by some health care providers in the state, during the 2015 session, members of the West Virginia Legislature approved a bill expanding access to the drug.

“It creates a unique pilot program within the criminal justice system in West Virginia,” Kanawha County Del. Chris Stansbury said of the bill. He was its lead sponsor.

The Pilot Program

Administered through the court system and paid for with Medicaid dollars from the state and federal government, the pilot program gives non-violent, low-level drug offenders participating in drug courts the option to use Vivitrol alongside counseling and rehabilitative services.

Drug courts are diversionary programs that allow addicts to work toward recovery with a team of medical and legal professionals instead of being incarcerated.

The pilot doesn’t just allow for Medicaid coverage, it also calls for two years of intense monitoring of Vivitrol’s use in five counties.

While those counties haven’t been determined by the West Virginia Supreme Court just yet, Justice Brent Benjamin — who helped create the drug court program — expects that decision to come soon. Then, he said, the data collection will be crucial.

“The one thing that we stress, we underscore in drug courts is that drug courts is an evidence-based program. We can tell what our re-occurrence rate is for people who graduate from the programs. They’re very good, in fact, they’re some of the best in the country, but we only know that because we keep the numbers,” he said.

The Counter

There are people who say Vivitrol won’t work, like Dr. Rolly Sullivan. He runs West Virginia University Hospitals’ addiction treatment clinic in Morgantown, where he specializes in using Suboxone coupled with individual and group therapy.

Sullivan said he doesn’t believe Vivitrol does much to help with an addict’s urge to get high.

“The cravings, which is that basic, biologic brain illness that is addiction, doesn’t go away when you’re on Vivitrol, and it doesn’t really get treated when you’re on Vivitrol,” he said. “That cravings still sits there and gnaws at people.

“Theoretically you should be able to put someone on Vivitrol and it would work fine. People wouldn’t use drugs because they couldn’t get high, but in reality, people will use Vivitrol once and the chances of them coming back for a second shot a month later are really low and the chances of coming back for a third shot is almost nonexistent.”

Sullivan was once a paid spokesman for Suboxone’s manufacturer, Reckitt Benckiser, but stopped accepting payment for speaking events in 2014.

Addicts Say It Works

Although the Federal Drug Administration hasn’t affirmed the claim, supporters of Vivitrol disagree with Sullivan. They say anecdotally, addicts have told them it does take away that itch to use.

“I’ve heard a lot of testimony on this, and the addicts, independent of one another and in testimony, have said it took my craving away and Vivitrol is the only thing I’ve heard people say that it took my craving away,” Ohio Representative Ryan Smith said. Smith wrote the pilot program for Ohio that West Virginia’s legislation was modeled after.

“That’s the thing we fight because we get people clean for 30 days or 60 days and then they fall off the wagon and end up using again,” he said.

Just like in West Virginia, Ohio administers the medication through state drug courts as an option for participants. Andrea Boxill, Deputy Director of the Ohio Governor’s Opiate Action Team, said while 82 percent of the drug court participants in that state’s six pilot counties chose Vivitrol, it’s not necessarily any more effective than another drug.

“You can use Vivitrol, which for some younger people who are just starting out in terms of heroin, it’s been effective, but it has not been any more effective than methadone, which is something that’s typically prescribed to people who are older who have been using heroin for years,” she said. “Nor is it any more impactful than Suboxone.

“The best way to say it is there is no one size that fits all disease, as with heart disease, high blood pressure or diabetes. You have to treat the individual and figure out which works best for that individual.”

But no matter which side of the fence you’re on, which medication you think is best, medical professionals, judges, politicians, they all say the same thing about the medications. They can’t be used alone. They must be used in conjunction with intense counseling and education.

Once counties are identified, both Justice Benjamin and Delegate Stansbury expect the Vivitrol pilot program in West Virginia to begin quickly. The bill went into effect June 16.

Those eligible for Medicaid or other government assistance within the pilot counties will have the option to use Vivitrol, but no medication or even participation in the drug court program is required.

Court officials expect to have preliminary results from the pilot program to report to the legislature during the 2016 session. A final report is due in 2017.

W.Va. Ranks Highest in the Nation in Preventable Deaths, Report Says

Despite taking many steps to prevent injuries, West Virginia ranks highest for the number of injury-related deaths in the United States. That’s according to a new report published this week that looks state-by-state at injury prevention policy.

Many of the injury-related deaths that put West Virginia in the lead nationally are attributed to drug overdoses, according to data compiled by Trust for America’s Health (TFAH). The organization published the new report along with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Its title: The Facts Hurt: A State-By-State Injury Prevention Policy Report

“Injuries are not just acts of fate. Research show they are pretty predictable and they are actually very preventable,” said TFAH Executive Director, Jeff Levy on a conference call discussing his organization’s new report.

“Overall, West Virginia has the highest rate of injury-deaths at 97.9 deaths per 100,000 people. New York the lowest at 40.3 deaths per 100,000 people.”

Levy said West Virginia has implemented policies very recently that will hopefully help curb those numbers in coming years – perhaps most importantly, policies to address the drug epidemic the state and nation face. More specifically, a new law went into effect last month, the Opioid Antagonist Act, which expands access to the overdose-counteracting drug Naloxone, allowing addicts and family members the ability to purchase the medicine through a prescription. Levy says drug overdoses became the leading cause of injury-related death in the nation about four years ago, surpassing motor vehicle deaths. Almost half of drug-related deaths are from prescription pill overdoses.

“Prescription drug abuse is a national epidemic,” Levy said, “but it impacts some states much more than others. West Virginia had the highest number of overdose and poisoning deaths. 33.5 per 100,000 people.”

But while more than 2 million Americans misuse drugs, the report says, there are a myriad of other ways to die by injury such as motor vehicle accidents, homicides and suicides. The report also points to traumatic brain injuries, warning that TBIs from sports and recreation among children have increased by 60 percent in the last decade. And one in three Americans older than 64 experiences a serious fall each year. While falls aren’t often fatal, they can lead to fatal complications and are a major concern in a state like West Virginia with an aging population. And increases in falls nationwide are anticipated as the Baby Boomer generation ages.

The Facts Hurt says preventable accidents cost the U.S. billions of dollars in medical care that could be better spent on other critical matters in the state and nation, like education and infrastructure projects.

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