A generation of African American heroin users is dying in the opioid epidemic nobody talks about. [View all]
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2018/local/opioid-epidemic-and-its-effect-on-african-americans/?utm_term=.2eeead7c431f
Spoon, whose product could be trusted, wasnt answering his phone. So just after 9 a.m. on a fetid August morning, Sam Rogers had trekked to a corner two miles east of the U.S. Capitol on Pennsylvania Avenue, hoping to find heroin that wouldnt kill him.
Now Rogers, 53, was back in his bedroom at the hot, dark house on R Street SE. Sitting in a worn swivel chair, he cued a Rob Thomas song on his cellphone and bent over his cooker and syringe. The heroin a tan powder sold for $10 a bag simmered into a cloudy liquid with the amber hue of ginger ale.
Palliative or poison: He would know soon enough.
Come on, Rogers murmured, sliding a needle into his outer forearm between knots of scar tissue. A pink plume of blood rose in the barrel of the syringe. There you go.
In the halls of Congress, a short bus ride away, medical professionals and bereaved families have warned for years of the damage caused by opioids to Americas predominantly white small towns and suburbs.
Almost entirely omitted from their message has been one of the drug epidemics deadliest subplots: The experience of older African Americans like Rogers, for whom habits honed over decades of addiction are no longer safe.
A lot of them OD in the city parks at night, often right in front of yuppie condos. Sometimes their dealers live in the yuppie condos.
Visual Story at the link
For those who don't have a WaPo subscription, there has been a drastic increase in ODs among black DC residents over the last few years. It's quite the opposite for whites. And black heroin/opioid addicts are mostly still treated like criminals. Whites are of course victims of the pharma companies and unscrupulous doctors, and deserve treatment and policy solutions from lawmakers.
Elderly addicts are disproportionately impacted by fentanyl, which wasn't a factor back in the day. There are also educated middle class addicts who don't look at all like what we may imagine as heroin addicts.