1 / 14

Heroin overdose: Myths, facts and intervention

Heroin overdose: Myths, facts and intervention. Shane Darke, PhD Professor National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre University of New South Wales. Mortality and heroin use. Annual mortality rates of 1-3% Excess mortality rate 13 times that of peers Major cause of death is overdose

jamuna
Download Presentation

Heroin overdose: Myths, facts and intervention

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Heroin overdose: Myths, facts and intervention Shane Darke, PhD Professor National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre University of New South Wales

  2. Mortality and heroin use • Annual mortality rates of 1-3% • Excess mortality rate 13 times that of peers • Major cause of death is overdose • 25:1 ratio of non-fatal to fatal

  3. Mechanisms of overdose • Heroin (diacetylmorphine) rapidly hydrolysed to 6-monoacetylmorphine, and then to morphine • CNS depressant • Primary mechanism of death is depression of respiration, resulting in hypoxia and death • Cardiac arrest may also occur

  4. Opioid overdose deaths 1991-2005

  5. Commonly held beliefs • Demographics • Young, inexperienced users • Toxicology • Large doses of drug (as “overdose” suggests) • Purity • Heroin is the cause • Impurities • Circumstances of death • Street based • Rapid death • Parasuicide • Non-injecting routes safe

  6. Demographics of cases • Average age early 30s. Few young cases • Male • Long-term, dependent users • Mostly unemployed • Not in treatment at time of death

  7. Toxicology of overdose • In many cases, blood morphine concentrations are low • Similar to those of living heroin users, or to those who died from other causes (e.g. homicide) • Purity only moderately associated with overdose deaths

  8. Toxicology of overdose • Heroin only overdose not the norm • In 75% of cases other drugs also found • Major drugs detected • Alcohol (50% of cases) • Benzodiazepines (25-30% of cases) • Antidepressants (tricyclics) (10% of cases) • Impurities rare (mostly caffeine, saccharine)

  9. Circumstances of overdose • Most overdoses occur at home • Weekly peak on Thursdays/Fridays • Suicides constitute only 5% of cases • Reduced risk, but non-injecting deaths do occur

  10. Circumstances of overdose • Instant death not the norm • No intervention prior to death in most cases (even when others present) • Recent release from prison/detoxification increased risk

  11. Natural history • Older users and relapse • Liver disease • A quarter of older cases have cirrhotic livers • Lower morphine concentrations amongst older cases

  12. Beliefs and facts

  13. Prevention strategies • Treatment • Long-term, stable treatment (RR, MT) • Polydrug use • Alcohol • Improved response by IDU • Ambulances • CPR • Naloxone provision

  14. References • Darke, S., Degenhardt, L. & Mattick, R. (2007) Mortality amongst illicit drug users: epidemiology, causes and intervention. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. • Darke, S. & Hall, W. (2003) Heroin overdose: research and evidence-based intervention. Journal of Urban Health: Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, 80, 189-200.

More Related