Death matters: understanding heroin/opiate overdose risk and testing potential to prevent deaths

Addiction. 2015 Jul:110 Suppl 2:27-35. doi: 10.1111/add.12904.

Abstract

Aims: To describe work undertaken over a 20-year period, investigating overdose characteristics among survivors, effects of acute heroin administration, clustering of risk of overdose fatality and potential interventions to reduce this fatal outcome.

Methods: Privileged-access interviewers obtained data from non-treatment as well as treatment samples; experimental study of drop in oxygen saturation following heroin/opiate injection; investigation of clusterings of death following prison release and treatment termination; and study of target populations as intervention work-force, including family as well as peers, and action research built into pilot implementation.

Results: Overdose has been experienced by about half of heroin/opiate misusers, with even higher proportions having witnessed an overdose, and with high levels of willingness to intervene. Heroin/opiates are associated with the majority of drug-related deaths, despite relative scarcity of use. Heroin injection causes a rapid drop in oxygen saturation, recovering only slowly over the next half hour. Deaths from drug overdose are greatly more likely on prison release and post-discharge from detoxification and other in-patient or residential settings. High levels of declared willingness to intervene are matched by active interventions. Both drug-using peers and family members show ability to improve knowledge and gain confidence from training. Audit study of take-home schemes finds approximately 10% of dispensed naloxone is used in real-life emergency situations.

Conclusions: Overdose is experienced by most users, with heroin/opiates contributing disproportionately to drug overdose deaths. High-risk times (e.g. after prison release) are now clearly identified. Peers and family are a willing potential intervention work-force, but are rarely trained or given pre-supply of naloxone. Large-scale naloxone provision (e.g. national across Scotland and Wales) is now being delivered, while large-scale randomized trials (e.g. N-ALIVE prison-release trial) are finally under way. Better naloxone products and better-organized provision are needed. The area does not need more debate; it now needs proper implementation alongside good scientific study.

Keywords: Death; emergency; heroin; naloxone; opiate; policy; prevention; take-home.

MeSH terms

  • Analgesics, Opioid / poisoning*
  • Death, Sudden / prevention & control
  • Drug Overdose / prevention & control
  • England / epidemiology
  • Heroin / poisoning*
  • Humans
  • Naloxone / therapeutic use
  • Narcotic Antagonists / therapeutic use
  • Opiate Substitution Treatment / mortality
  • Risk Factors
  • Scotland / epidemiology
  • Substance Abuse, Intravenous / mortality
  • Substance Abuse, Intravenous / prevention & control
  • Substance-Related Disorders / mortality
  • Substance-Related Disorders / prevention & control*

Substances

  • Analgesics, Opioid
  • Narcotic Antagonists
  • Naloxone
  • Heroin