Lab Matters Summer 2017 | Page 4

president's / executive director’s message get addicted, then they may switch to street drugs. At the same time, synthetic opioids, such as fentanyl derivatives, are much more powerful than older drugs, including fentanyl itself and even heroin. Smaller doses can be deadly. And these days, synthetic opioids are not just diverted from pharmaceutical use, but are being produced specifically for the street market. What was once seen as a law enforcement issue has become a public health problem. Stepping Up to the Front Lines of an American Tragedy APHL President Ewa King and APHL Executive Director Scott Becker discuss a potential role for public health laboratories to help mitigate a nationwide epidemic of opioid addiction and overdose. Ewa King: Scott, I am excited to serve as APHL’s president. And I am proud of the indispensable work public health laboratories do to support state health agencies every day. Among many public health issues laboratories engage in, environmental health topics deserve additional attention. Over the last decade, we have made great progress in highlighting the important role of biomonitoring in environmental public health. Importantly, we have seen an emergence of the National Biomonitoring Network. Biomonitoring, which involves testing for environmental chemicals in clinical samples, has not always been seen as a core function of public health laboratories. Another issue I hope to highlight during my presidency is one that has also not yet fully engaged the public health laboratory: the opioid overdose crisis we are experiencing nationwide. The rate of overdose deaths 2 LAB MATTERS Summer 2017 involving prescription opioids or heroin has quadrupled since 1999. Overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids (other than methadone) jumped 80% between 2013 and 2014, and another 72% between 2014 and 2015. Sadly, according to the CDC, overdose is now the leading cause of injury-related deaths in the United States, surpassing motor vehicle crashes. Scott Becker: This is an American tragedy that touches many families. As I understand it, the problem has been ongoing for many years, but was originally concentrated in marginalized populations and considered a social or law enforcement issue. King: That’s right. Now the demographics are all-encompassing. It’s all ages and all sectors of society. Opioids have been prescribed for pain treatment and some would argue that they have been over-prescribed; when people In Rhode Island, we at the State Health Laboratories are very aware of this problem. Our laboratory includes the forensic toxicology laboratory that supports the Office of the State Medical Examiners, located in the same building. We conduct the tests that ascertain whether a death is due to overdose and, if so, what drugs were involved. In our small state, there were 336 accidental drug-related overdose deaths in 2016, compared with 138 in 2009. Becker: So far, the public health response to the crisis has focused on opioid prescribing practices, medication-assisted treatment for the addicted and the use of drugs like naloxone to reverse an overdose-in-process. But there are roles that public health laboratories can play. At APHL, we are planning to establish a community-of-practice that can serve as a think tank to bring laboratory leaders together to discuss opioid issues in their states and to identify resources we can offer up across the laboratory system to help with this problem. I imagine, at some point, there could be guidelines developed, sharing of laboratory methods and educational efforts. APHL can also look at the epidemic from an advocacy perspective to ensure funds are available to states and to laboratories that are taking on this issue. King: I really do feel the public health laboratory should have a greater role helping to determine the extent of the problem. At the moment, surveillance consists mainly of recording instances of fatal overdoses. But in most cases people don’t die from addiction overnight; they take drugs over many PublicHealthLabs @APHL APHL.org