![]() ever since then." Other potency issues surround the way the drugs can be cut with insanely lethal agents like fentanyl and carfentanyl. "Dealers make more money by stretching their product" with these other agents, he adds. in Beachwood is that they ar- en't sold on street corners." death or jail," states Bernon. But if those outcomes are narrowly escaped, the outlook is still grim. the first three months after detox, the heroin relapse rate has been estimated to be above 90% in some studies and at least 50% in others when a long-term treatment, such as methadone or buprenorphine for mainte- nance therapy, is not used. year and working full time in the financial technology indus- try, it has been a difficult jour- his education at the University of Cincinnati to a screeching halt during his sophomore year. in high school, but pills were quickly introduced. "At parties, kids would say that if you took a Percocet or Vicodin, then drank two beers, it would feel like you drank six." He also reports that the pills "were not hard to come by at BHS." Then he had his own prescription for Vicoprofen (hydrocodone and ibuprofen, whereas Vicodin is hydrocodone and acetamino- phen) after his wisdom teeth were pulled, putting him in possession of a bottle of about 30 pills when he says he prob- ably only needed around four or five. a moral failing." He describes having an addictive physiology, and that led him "to need more and more and more." Plus, it was always available. get pills from someone you graduate. His parents had no idea what was happening either, he says. "I was very good at hiding it. But if they noticed anything, they couldn't put their finger on what it was, and they probably were in denial." the drugs fulfilled "a need to change the way my brain feels." But the counter messages at the time don't do drugs, and images of homeless people living under bridges failed to have an impact for the simple truth that they were inconsis- tent with what he saw around him: friends using drugs with immunity and impunity. "You discredit the message," he says, "when you don't see any nega- tive outcomes." lack of information concerning their power to create addiction. "I took them from a place of ignorance," he explains, adding that he wishes there had been fewer messages involving fear from one drug by taking a different one. And when he arrived at the University of Cincinnati in 2002, the school was flooded with OxyContin. During his first night in the dorm, there was a party and pills were present, and there was no stigma attached to their use, he explains. But equally important, he says, no one makes the connection between pills and heroin, and how that progression can occur. what he could do about it. "I wasn't abused as a child," he says, by way of explaining that his use was an escalating biological chemical dependency, indepen- dent of any other factors. your whole life when you're growing up," Marks says. "But all I wanted was to not feel the way I did," a condition created as the drugs wore off. "There was never a moment's hesi- tation when it came to using |