"Every 'never' I ever said came true": transitions from opioid pills to heroin injecting.

This qualitative study documents the pathways to injecting heroin by users in Philadelphia and San Francisco before and during a pharmaceutical opioid pill epidemic. Data was collected through in-depth, semi-structured interviews (conducted between 2010 and 2012) that were, conducted against a background of longer-term participant-observation, ethnographic studies of street-based drug users and dealers in Philadelphia (2007-12) and San Francisco (1994-2007, 2012). Philadelphia and San Francisco were selected for their contrasting political economies, immigration patterns and source type of heroin. In Philadelphia the ethnographers found heroin injectors, usually white users, who had started their opiate using careers with prescription opioids rather than transitioning from other drugs. In both Philadelphia and San Francisco, most of the young heroin injectors interviewed began, their drug-use trajectories with opioid pills--usually Percocet (oxycodone and acetaminophen), generic short acting oxycodone or, OxyContin (long-acting oxycodone)--before transitioning to heroin, usually by nasal inhalation (sniffing) or smoking at first, followed by injecting. While most of the Philadelphia users were born in the city or its suburbs and had started using both opioid pills and heroin there, many of the San Francisco users had initiated their pill and sometimes heroin use elsewhere and had migrated to the city from around the country. Nevertheless, patterns of transition of younger injectors were similar in both cities suggesting an evolving national pattern. In contrast, older users in both Philadelphia and San Francisco were more likely to have graduated to heroin injection from non-opiate drugs such as cannabis, methamphetamine and cocaine. Pharmaceutical opioid initiates typically reported switching to heroin for reasons of cost and ease-of-access to supply after becoming physically and emotionally dependent on opioid pills. Many expressed surprise and dismay at their progression to sniffing and subsequently to injecting heroin. Historically and structurally these users found themselves caught at the intersection of two major developments in the opiate supply: (1) an over 500% increase in opiate pill prescription from 1997 to 2005 resulting in easy access to diverted supplies of less stigmatized opiates than heroin and (2) a heroin supply glut, following the US entry of Colombian-sourced, heroin in the early 1990s, that decreased cost and increased purity at the retail level. A nationwide up-cycle of heroin use may be occurring among young inner city, suburban and rural youth fueled by widespread prescription opioid pill use.

[1]  Daniel Rosenblum,et al.  Intertwined Epidemics: National Demographic Trends in Hospitalizations for Heroin- and Opioid-Related Overdoses, 1993–2009 , 2013, PloS one.

[2]  R. Carlson,et al.  "I'm not afraid of those ones just 'cause they've been prescribed": perceptions of risk among illicit users of pharmaceutical opioids. , 2012, The International journal on drug policy.

[3]  M. Pletcher,et al.  Trends in opioid prescribing by race/ethnicity for patients seeking care in US emergency departments. , 2008, JAMA.

[4]  A. Strauss,et al.  Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures and techniques. , 1992 .

[5]  J. Havens,et al.  Transition from first illicit drug use to first injection drug use among rural Appalachian drug users: a cross-sectional comparison and retrospective survival analysis. , 2012, Addiction.

[6]  Robert G Carlson,et al.  Probable relationship between opioid abuse and heroin use. , 2003, American family physician.

[7]  D. Fergusson,et al.  Cannabis use and other illicit drug use: testing the cannabis gateway hypothesis. , 2006, Addiction.

[8]  J. Fincham Health Policy and Ethics , 2011 .

[9]  S. Strathdee,et al.  Social influences on the transition to injection drug use among young heroin sniffers: a qualitative analysis , 2002 .

[10]  H. Finestone,et al.  CATS, KICKS, AND COLOR* , 1957 .

[11]  É. Roy,et al.  The Growing Popularity of Prescription Opioid Injection in Downtown Montréal: New Challenges for Harm Reduction , 2011, Substance use & misuse.

[12]  H. Surratt,et al.  Effect of abuse-deterrent formulation of OxyContin. , 2012, The New England journal of medicine.

[13]  A. Golub,et al.  The Opiate Pain Reliever Epidemic among U.S. Arrestees 2000–2010: Regional and Demographic Variations , 2013, Journal of ethnicity in substance abuse.

[14]  A. Muñoz,et al.  Relationship between therapeutic use and abuse of opioid analgesics in rural, suburban, and urban locations in the United States , 2007, Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety.

[15]  J. Inciardi,et al.  Prescription opioid abuse and diversion in an urban community: the results of an ultrarapid assessment. , 2009, Pain medicine.

[16]  P. Mayock ‘Scripting’ risk: Young people and the construction of drug journeys , 2005 .

[17]  D. Kandel Stages and Pathways of Drug Involvement: Examining The Gateway Hypothesis , 2002 .

[18]  Dike van de Mheen,et al.  Tracing Selection Effects in Three Non-Probability Samples , 2005, European Addiction Research.

[19]  D. Ciccarone Heroin in brown, black and white: structural factors and medical consequences in the US heroin market. , 2009, The International journal on drug policy.

[20]  P. Bourgois,et al.  Commentary on Genberg et al. (2011): the structural vulnerability imposed by hypersegregated US inner-city neighborhoods--a theoretical and practical challenge for substance abuse research. , 2011, Addiction.

[21]  Alex Harocopos,et al.  Initiation into prescription opioid misuse amongst young injection drug users. , 2012, The International journal on drug policy.

[22]  Daniel Rosenblum,et al.  The entry of Colombian-sourced heroin into the US market: the relationship between competition, price, and purity. , 2014, The International journal on drug policy.

[23]  Nicholas A. McGrath,et al.  A Graphical Journey of Innovative Organic Architectures That Have Improved Our Lives , 2010 .

[24]  Laxmaiah Manchikanti,et al.  National drug control policy and prescription drug abuse: facts and fallacies. , 2007, Pain physician.

[25]  Nora D Volkow,et al.  Characteristics of opioid prescriptions in 2009. , 2011, JAMA.

[26]  R. Carlson,et al.  Initiation to Pharmaceutical Opioids and Patterns of Misuse: Preliminary Qualitative Findings Obtained by the Ohio Substance Abuse Monitoring Network , 2006 .

[27]  D. Ciccarone,et al.  Impact of South American heroin on the US heroin market 1993-2004. , 2009, The International journal on drug policy.

[28]  J. Inciardi,et al.  Heroin in the age of crack cocaine. , 1999 .

[29]  A. Strauss,et al.  Basics of Qualitative Research , 1992 .

[30]  M. Agar,et al.  Using Trend Theory to Explain Heroin Use Trends , 2001, Journal of psychoactive drugs.

[31]  R. Carlson,et al.  Methamphetamine Use in Dayton, Ohio: Preliminary Findings from the Ohio Substance Abuse Monitoring Network , 2007, Journal of psychoactive drugs.

[32]  P. Bourgois,et al.  Explaining the Geographical Variation of HIV Among Injection Drug Users in the United States , 2003, Substance use & misuse.

[33]  Susan Okie,et al.  A flood of opioids, a rising tide of deaths. , 2010, The New England journal of medicine.

[34]  Geoffrey Poitras OxyContin, prescription opioid abuse and economic medicalization , 2012 .

[35]  B. Edlin,et al.  Reinterpreting Ethnic Patterns among White and African American Men Who Inject Heroin: A Social Science of Medicine Approach , 2006, PLoS medicine.

[36]  A. Zee The Promotion and Marketing of OxyContin: Commercial Triumph, Public Health Tragedy , 2009 .

[37]  B. Edlin,et al.  Soft tissue infections among injection drug users--San Francisco, California, 1996-2000. , 2001, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[38]  P. Bourgois,et al.  The Everyday Violence of Hepatitis C Among Young Women Who Inject Drugs in San Francisco. , 2004, Human organization.

[39]  L. Ouellet,et al.  Racial and ethnic changes in heroin injection in the United States: implications for the HIV/AIDS epidemic. , 2008, Drug and alcohol dependence.

[40]  A. Muñoz,et al.  Trends in abuse of Oxycontin and other opioid analgesics in the United States: 2002-2004. , 2005, The journal of pain : official journal of the American Pain Society.