La Plata, MD – Itโ€™s a scourge that wonโ€™t be easily fixed.

Charles County Health Officer Dr. Dianna E. Abney and Charles County Circuit Court Judge Helen I. Harrington outlined the countyโ€™s Drug and Alcohol Abuse Councilโ€™s policies Tuessday, March 10, telling the Charles County Commissioners that while alcohol is still the top drug of choice, the county is unfortunately seeing opiate usage twice as high as the state.

โ€œOpiates are on a sharp increase,โ€ Abney stated. โ€œWe would like to have fewer opiate-related visits going forward.โ€

Abney said her agency does a good job getting citizens in treatment programs.
โ€œWe do a good job of getting people outpatient treatment through the health department,โ€ she said.

โ€œThe problem starts very young,โ€ Abney added. โ€œWe have had 12-year-olds who say, โ€˜I like the way it feels โ€ฆ Iโ€™m going to take daddyโ€™s Percocet.โ€

Harrington said the county is seeing a dramatic use in synthetic drugs in the county.
โ€œIn addition to opiates and alcohol, we are still seeing cocaine,โ€ she said. โ€œK-2 [synthetic marijuana] and PCP are coming back again.โ€

Harrington admitted itโ€™s a โ€œtough loveโ€ approach which seems to work best, saying she will sometimes incarcerate users, just to get them clean so that treatment can begin.

โ€œWhen they have to appear before a judge every two weeks, they have to be held accountable,โ€ she said. โ€œWe try to encourage people to make small changes in their lives. Seventy-five percent of program graduates remain arrest free,โ€ she pointed out.

She said if she can get violators into the program, it ultimately is a cost savings for the county, because to keep a prisoner incarcerated in the Charles County Detention Center can cost as much as $18,000 to $20,000 per inmate, and that in the Maryland Department of Corrections, the cost is closer to $20,000 to $25,000.

โ€œI have held people in jail so they can detox,โ€ she said.

Harrington said she attended an event at the Jude House recently.

โ€œThere were people there who were sober and straight who werenโ€™t sober and straight when they were in my courtroom,โ€ Harrington noted.

The numbers arenโ€™t all good, Abney admitted.

โ€œThey donโ€™t always tell us the whole story,โ€ she said. โ€œQuite a few are doing a combination of opiates and heroin. More than 10 percent of our patients are doing more than one drug at the time. Sixty percent of the people walking in do have an opiate addiction.

Harrington said that the county is leaning for less of a law enforcement solution and more of a public support solution.

โ€œWhen people are ready, thatโ€™s when we need to be available to help them,โ€ Abney added.

Contact Joseph Norris at joe.norris@thebaynet.com.