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Drug addiction center

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Vivian Moon View Drop Down
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Joined: May 16 2008
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Drug addiction center
    Posted: Nov 09 2015 at 8:12am

Posted: 7:20 a.m. Monday, Nov. 9, 2015

Drug addiction center proposed in Middletown

By Rick McCrabb

Staff Writer

MIDDLETOWN 

The founder of a Middletown drug recovery organization hopes to expand his efforts by opening an intervention and educational “hub” on Central Avenue.

Ron Ward, founder of Celebrating Restoration, said his grassroots group provides intervention, drug counseling, and job placement for drug addicts.

While Ward said the Central Avenue location would be convenient because it’s a short walk for addicts who live downtown, some local business owners aren’t welcoming the efforts and the crime they say it could bring.

Celebrating Restoration doesn’t own a building now, so Ward said meetings for addicts take place in his Middletown home, local businesses and on the streets. He said once a center is open, it will provide one place for recovering addicts to receive crisis intervention, mentor programs and job placement, though he stressed the site will not be a treatment center.

The goal, Ward said, is to free people of their addictions, get them off the streets, find them jobs, and thus increase property values in the city.

Ward, 46, a recovering drug addict, father and husband of two teens, said he’s negotiating with the owner of a building in the 2100 block of Central Avenue, across the street from Dollar General. He has applied for grants to fund the acquisition of the building and he’s scheduled to meet with City Manager Doug Adkins this week to discuss his plans. He hopes to have the center open by the beginning of 2016.

Ward said the intervention program is an outgrowth of the Heroin Summit that Adkins organized this year in response to what has been called “a heroin epidemic” in the city. Community leaders have met numerous times this year, brainstorming ideas how to reduce the number of drug overdoses in the city. The group is tackling five categories related to heroin: prevention, identification and intervention, treatment, post treatment and community activities. Adkins has said he hopes to see heroin-related deaths reduced in the city by January 2016.

For the first six months of the year, there were 28 heroin-related deaths in the city, said Jackie Phillips, Middletown’s health director. She said there were 55 heroin-related deaths in the city in 2014.

Countywide, there were 85 heroin-related deaths the first six months this year, up from 56 during the same time in 2014, said Martin Schneider, an administrator for the Butler County Coroner’s Office. There were 103 deaths in 2014, he said. At the current rate, there would be 170 this year, an increase of 65 percent.

Maj. Mark Hoffman, from the Middletown Division of Police, said as Middletown looks for ways to reduce heroin deaths, law enforcement is only part of the solution.

“The larger piece is intervention and education,” said Hoffman, who has met with Ward about his proposal. “We welcome anything that helps our community.”

Ward, a 1987 Edgewood High School graduate, said he sees his effort, the city and the police department “collaborating to make the community better.”

Two Middletown businessmen have differing opinions on the proposed drug educational program.

Steve O’Neil, owner of Stefano’s Italian Cafe on Central, owns several properties along Central Avenue. He has tried to “build the neighborhood up” and doesn’t welcome Ward’s efforts if it becomes a hangout for drug addicts, he said.

He wants the building to have set business hours, something like 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

“Not some drop off center,” O’Neil said. “I don’t want people just hanging out in front of the place, milling around all hours of the day. We don’t need that in the neighborhood. Bad for business.”

Steve Davidson, owner of Steve’s Trophies, located one block from the proposed site, understands the concern that attracting recovering drug addicts to the area could adversely impact business, but he also sees the need for drug intervention in the city.

“Somebody has to do it,” he said. “It has to be somewhere.”

Ward said that in the last two years, his group has placed 80 people into recovery programs. Most of the funding has come from private donations, he said. He said the group meets at 7 p.m. every Thursday at Triple Moon Coffee Co., 1100 Central Ave. and the number of attendees continues to grow.

“I need an army,” he said.

 

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Vivian Moon View Drop Down
MUSA Council
MUSA Council


Joined: May 16 2008
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Nov 09 2015 at 9:33am

Is there no common sense left in Middletown or City Hall?

Tell me again how many empty buildings and homes are sitting empty in this city and this is the ONLY place available for a drug crisis center?

The successful businesses located in this small area of the city have been here for years with the exception of Combs BBQ and Dollar General, the new kids on the block. Where is Marty of Zoning Department?

Business Friendly?...Not from where I’m sitting..

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VietVet View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote VietVet Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Nov 09 2015 at 11:58am
"While Ward said the Central Avenue location would be convenient because it’s a short walk for addicts who live downtown, some local business owners aren’t welcoming the efforts and the crime they say it could bring"

Now wait a minute. Mr. Ward, do you mean to tell me that there are drug addicts living downtown? Is this the same downtown that the artzy/downtown supporters are touting as the next arts mecca of the Midwest? The same downtown that the city has wasted millions on trying to force fit culture down there in an otherwise blue collar city? The same downtown that features a hamburger, some chips and a pickle for 20 bucks in their upscale cultural restaurants?

Look, with the saturation of section 8 low income brought to the city,and seeing an increase in crime and a strain on our resources, is it a good idea to now feature a "drug addition center" to lure people doing non-acceptable activity to the city too? Doesn't this have the potential to add to the strain? Why are we intentionally trying to present opportunities to persuade this type of behavior in this city? Send some of this to another town in Butler County but don't bring any more destruction here. We have already absorbed more than our fair share of unacceptable activity that has contributed to the downfall of the city. Let's resist these activities, not welcome them.

If we keep going in this direction we will need to rename the city Hudville or Ghettotown. Let's try a different direction. Shoot for a higher class of people on the inbound side of attraction.

If Mr. Ward really is passionate about this, let Mr. Ward continue to provide the services in his own home using his own money. Some of us don't wish to help those who have made this choice.
I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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Restore1968 View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Restore1968 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Jan 27 2016 at 10:36pm
We are not a treatment center - we assist with getting people off the streets and locate treatment outside our areas. Relocation is key to the success of one's recovery...
Ron Ward
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Restore1968 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Jan 27 2016 at 10:45pm
Vivian, we are an outreach team- most of our work is on the streets and helping individuals to locate treatment - Those who suffer from addict are all over our city. Ohio ranks # 2 in the nation related to opiate and heroin overdoses and Middletown ranks # 8 in the state of Ohio.

People have a misunderstanding- WE mainly need an administrative building- there is no treatment, no counseling etc.... We cannot afford to do nothing.

We have transported people to Arkansas, Florida, Dayton, Cincinnati and other places for treatment. We are not asking for a treatment center here in downtown Middletown- we know that would not be good- We just want a place for staff to be centrally located to the interstates, route 4 etc.. 

People are making assumptions about our work. Someone stated that Middletown is becoming ghetto- No, the fact is there are people in Middletown who are normal individuals suffering from a disease. I would invite you to take a moment to sit down and talk with me about our work  Addicts and Prostitutes all over Middletown - we want to clean the place up, We have assisted over 100 people and with more support we can quadruple those numbers. Let's break the stigma of addiction and get people into recovery so they can become productive citizens - our program is working yet there is no program that will have  a 100% success rate...

Thanks Vivian for your input.
Ron Ward
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Vivian Moon View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Jan 28 2016 at 1:30pm

Restore 1968
If this is to be just office space for your group then I will leave it up to the local business owners to decide what they want in this area of the city without any further comments from me.
However our local successful small business owners in this area need all the support and protection we can offer them.
I’m well aware of the difficult task you have before you dealing with drug addiction in our city. I also understand that there are no quick or easy asnswers to solve this problem.
We have a mental health crisis in our county. At some point in time we are going to have to spend the money to deal with it.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Jan 30 2016 at 12:22pm

Posted: 12:00 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 30, 2016

Despite efforts, heroin deaths setting records

By Rick McCrabb

Staff Writer

BUTLER COUNTY 

At a time when local agencies are being armed with more resources, they appear to be losing the fight against the heroin epidemic.

Butler and Warren county cities are hosting heroin summits, adding rehabilitation centers andclean needle exchanges, and allowing a non-profit Hamilton pharmacy to dispense Narcan, the drug that reverses the effects of heroin and opiate-related overdoses, without a prescription.

Still, people are dying from heroin at record numbers.

“This is a very difficult situation,” said Dr. Ralph Talkers, director of emergency medicine at Atrium Medical Center in Middletown. “We are not winning the situation. We’re losing the battle.”

One of those who understands the pain of heroin, and its dire consequences, is Dorothy McIntosh-Shuemake, whose daughter, Alison Shuemake, 18, died Aug. 26, 2015 from a heroin overdose. The mother has spent the last several months trying to keep other parents from burying their children.

“I knew heroin was bad,” she said. “I didn’t know it could kill you the first time you took it.”

There were 137 total drug overdoses in Butler County for the first nine months of 2015, and 108 of them were blamed on heroin, according to the Butler County Coroner’s Office. At the current rate, there would be 183 total overdoses and 144 heroin-related, both records for the county, the office said.

Just six years ago, there were seven heroin related deaths in the county, meaning the deaths have jumped 1,957 percent since 2010.

In Warren County, there were 60 total drug overdoses in 2015, and 18 of them were heroin-related, the coroner’s office said. But there are 15 cause of death cases pending, according to the Warren County Coroner’s Office. If six more are blamed on heroin, that would set a record in Warren County.

Butler and Warren counties are trending similar to the state, according to the Ohio Department of Health. There were 2,482 drug overdoses in 2014, the highest in the state’s history and 17.6 percent higher than 2013. Of those drug deaths, 1,177 were heroin related.

Ohio’s death rate from unintentional drug overdoses in 2014 was 21.4 per 100,000 residents, compared to 18.2 in 2013. That means more people died from heroin overdoses than alcohol and cocaine overdoses combined, according to the state health department.

Dr. Talkers said the emergency room treats one to three patients a week who have overdosed from heroin. He called the heroin epidemic and its hold “a relentless, uncontrollable situation” throughout the region.

He said they typically see the patients after the city’s emergency medical technicians have administered Narcan in the field. Dr. Talkers said heroin has hit “close to home” for some of the medical staff because they have known people who overdosed.

He said heroin is the current drug of choice of addicts because “it’s a cheap way to feel good.”

Then he quickly added: “With significant risks.”

Even those who survive overdosing on heroin sometimes spend extensive time in the intensive care unit and rehabilitating, Dr. Talkers said.

Possible halfway house in Middletown

Middletown City Manager Doug Adkins said a former fire station on Tytus Avenue may be repurposed as a halfway house to battle against heroin addiction. He said architects are evaluating the fire station to see how easily it could be converted into a halfway house for people recovering from addiction after they leave drug rehabilitation programs.

Preliminary plans would have the city lease the fire station, which was deactivated last year, to Community Behavioral Health, which would operate the halfway house.

Adkins said the city recognizes the “terrible cost of addiction.”

In response to what has been called a “heroin epidemic,” Adkins formed a Heroin Summit that met several times last year, and will meet again in February. He has said the goal of the summit is to see a measurable drop in heroin deaths during the first quarter of 2016.

The group, made up of leaders throughout Butler and Warren counties, is tackling five categories related to heroin: prevention, identification and intervention, treatment, post treatment and community activities, he said.

One Middletown agency has grown because of the Heroin Summit. Ron Ward, founder of Celebrating Restoration, a Middletown drug recovery organization, said his group provides intervention, drug counseling, and job placement for drug addicts.

The group meets every Thursday at Triple Moon Coffee Co. on Central Avenue, and every week, Ward said people are placed in recovery. In the last two years, his group has placed 80 people into recovery programs, he said.

He’s hoping to open a downtown center, possibly on Central Avenue, that would provide one central location for recovering addicts to receive crisis intervention, mentor programs and job placement, though he stressed the site would not be a treatment center.

When asked about Ward’s proposal and what needs to happen to reduce heroin deaths, Maj. Mark Hoffman, of the Middletown Division of Police, said law enforcement is only part of the solution.

“The larger piece is intervention and education,” he said. “We welcome anything that helps our community.”

Adkins said some of the measures taken by the city are paying off. He said the city has seen a 15 percent drop in calls for service and a corresponding reduction in crimes in 2015.

He said the city also saw its Narcan use drop by a third during the last quarter of 2015 compared to the same period in 2014. He said the police department recently added another canine officer to its narcotics division and a task force will be implementing the chronic nuisance ordinance in the spring.

Adkins said the emphasis this year will be eliminating places where this activity continues in Middletown and finding ways to either get addicts into treatment or away from the city.

“This is an important issue, and one communities across the nation are struggling with,” he said. “No community has successfully purged this from their borders. We are all looking for solutions. We have a good foundation in place, and will keep at it as long as it takes. Funding, of course, is always an issue, and we are currently looking for funding for many of these Heroin Summit initiatives. This is a marathon, not a sprint, and we know that results may come slowly, but in Middletown we are beginning to see encouraging outcomes of our efforts, and we will stay the course.”

Narcan available in Hamilton

Officials with Community First Pharmacy, a subsidiary of Community First Solutions, said theyhave been given the green light by the Ohio Pharmacy Board for the physician-approved protocol for dispensing Narcan, also known as Naloxone. While the drug is available at several pharmacies with a prescription, including some area Walgreen’s, Community First Pharmacy would be the only one in Butler County authorized to provide it over the counter without one.

Ashley Hoehn, pharmacy manager at Community First Pharmacy, has been in her job for three years. She said she began to take notice of the heroin problem and wanted to find a way to help curb the overdose deaths.

“In Hamilton there has been a huge heroin epidemic along with abuse of pain medications recently,” Hoehn said. “We started working with the Butler County Mental Health and Addiction Recovery Services Board, and we wanted to provide an outreach to the community and give them the access to Narcan to help prevent death by overdose.”

Some critics, however, have claimed that wider access to Narcan could promote drug use by giving users a sense of security in case of an overdose.

Laura Sheehan, vice-president of Behavioral Health at Community First Solutions, said the program should be a positive tool to help save lives, and she is happy to see Butler County get one up and running.

“Like many in our community, we are extremely concerned about the opiate overdose. This partnership with Community First Pharmacy and the Butler County Mental Health and Addiction Recovery Services Board allows us to help break down some of the barriers that exist in receiving care,” she said.

‘I love her’

Even with all the medical advancements, the programs and research, Dorothy McIntosh-Shuemake said it feels like: “We are walking through molasses.”

She wishes she could turn back the clock. She wants her baby back.

“I wish I could tell her all about the great things she did,” her mother said. “We don’t spend enough time telling our children how wonderful they are. We spend too much time correcting, criticizing and not enough complimenting. I know she knows I love her.”


By the numbers

1,177: Number of Ohioans who died from heroin overdoses in 2014.

47,055: Number of drug deaths nationally in 2014.

87,071: Number of Ohio Medicaid recipients diagnosed with opioid use disorder.

$72.9M: The cost to Ohio Medicaid for medication-assisted treatment in 2014.

Source: Ohio Department of Medicaid, U.S. Centers for Disease Control, Ohio Department of Health

DRUG, HEROIN OVERDOSES

STATE OF OHIO

Year, Total Overdoses, Heroin Overdoses

2010, 1,544, 338

2011, 1,765, 426

2012, 1,914, 680

2013, 2,110, 983

2014, 2,482, 1,177

BUTLER COUNTY

Year, Total Overdoses, Heroin Overdoses

2010, 61, 7

2011, 94, 7

2012, 103, 30

2013, 118, 60

2014, 137, 103

*-2015, 183, 144

WARREN COUNTY

Year, Total Overdoses, Heroin Overdoses

2010, 22, 9

2011, 11, 7

2012, 12, 9

2013, 31, 23

2014, 42, 21

2015, 60, 18

*-Projected yearly totals

SOURCES: Ohio Department of Ohio, Butler and Warren county coroner’s offices

STAYING WITH THE STORY

The Journal-News has been at the forefront of covering the heroin epidemic that has impacted Butler and Warren counties. We will continue to write about the topic, how it’s affecting the region and what is being done to solve the problem.

 

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