ReportWire

Tag: causes of death

  • A Peabody teacher’s hopeful future after early breast cancer diagnosis

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    DANVERS — Getting an annual mammogram is critical for women over 40. Peabody teacher and Georgetown resident Pam Davies knows that better than most.

    Davies, a first-grade teacher of 31 years at the Captain Samuel Brown Elementary School, was diagnosed with stage-zero breast cancer three days before school let out in June.


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    By Caroline Enos | Staff Writer

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  • Walk for Hope

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    ANDOVER — Samaritans of Merrimack Valley hosted the ninth annual Walk for Hope on Saturday to promote mental health and suicide awareness.

    Those who attended the event at the Andover High School track enjoyed raffles, music, face painting, guest speakers and food.

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    Photos by Reba Saldanha

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  • Breast Cancer Awareness 2025: Share your stories, join our campaign

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    North of Boston Media Group is preparing to launch its 14th annual Breast Cancer Awareness campaign.

    And we want to share your stories surrounding this far-reaching disease.


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  • Annual Talbot Memorial Walk/Run this Sunday

    Annual Talbot Memorial Walk/Run this Sunday

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    DANVERS — The annual Talbot Memorial Walk/Run is set to step off Sunday for its 14th annual outing in memory of a Danvers couple who both died after battling cancer.

    “In 2011, our community rallied together for the first Lynda J. Talbot Memorial 5K Walk/Run to honor the life of our mom Lynda J. Talbot after her courageous battle with breast cancer,” Stacy (Talbot) Bazylinski said.

    “In 2022, we lost our dad Bruce after his incredibly courageous fight against lung cancer. To honor their memory and contribute to the ongoing fight against cancer, we have established this memorial 5K.”

    In the 13 years since it was established, the Talbot Memorial Fund has supported more than 100 individuals and families battling cancer on the North Shore.

    In addition, scholarships have been given to some 70 deserving Danvers High School seniors in the memory of the Talbots. Lastly, donations have been made to many cancer research organizations.

    Proceeds from this year’s race will, as always, go to the Talbot Memorial Fund to provide financial support to local families battling cancer and to scholarships to Danvers High students.

    “None of this would be possible without the generosity of all our sponsors and participants,” Julie (Talbot) Donnelly said. “Your commitment to this cause, year after year, has truly made a difference in people’s lives, and we wholeheartedly thank you.”

    Bruce and Lynda Talbot were lifelong Danvers residents. They both attended Danvers High School, created lasting relationships, and raised a family in the community.

    Family, friends, and those who would like to join the camaraderie are encouraged to sign up using the online link talbot.racewire.com

    The event begins at 10 a.m. at the Great Oak School, 76 Pickering St., Danvers.

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    By Buck Anderson | Staff Writer

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  • Breast Cancer Awareness 2024: Share your stories, join our campaign

    Breast Cancer Awareness 2024: Share your stories, join our campaign

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    The Eagle-Tribune is preparing to launch its 13th annual Breast Cancer Awareness campaign.

    And we want to share your stories surrounding this far-reaching disease.

    Our special Breast Cancer Awareness supplement due out in October will highlight stories of survival, courage, determination and hope.

    In addition, it will look at the role of caregivers, our local medical community, resource agencies and support networks that have joined forces to fight this complex disease across our North of Boston communities.

    Do you have a personal story to share or know someone who has waged a courageous battle against breast cancer? Do you know of individuals, organizations or agencies that have stepped up to support patients and their families as they navigate through the challenges of the disease?

    We hope to showcase these stories and more in our annual report and, in doing so, inspire, educate and raise awareness about the “Power of Pink” and the ongoing commitment to the fight for a cure.

    Send your ideas to Ann Reily at areily@northofboston.com. The deadline is Sept. 13.

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  • Sheriff expands inmate drug treatment program to The Farm

    Sheriff expands inmate drug treatment program to The Farm

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    LAWRENCE — Sheriff Kevin Coppinger plans to stand before hundreds of police chiefs this month and tell them how he’s bringing drugs into Essex County jails.

    It may sound odd as keeping illicit drugs and contraband out of jails and prisons will always be an issue, Coppinger noted.

    But Middleton Jail now has a nationally acclaimed Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) program where addicted inmates can receive their medically prescribed doses of Suboxone, methadone and Vivitrol on a daily basis.

    In large part, such doses are used to treat the opioid addiction that has plagued the region for the past two decades. And many local crimes are drug driven.

    Last week, the MAT program expanded when a second treatment site opened at an Essex County Sheriff’s Department location — The Correctional Alternative Center, known as The Farm, off Marston Street in Lawrence.

    Adding a second MAT unit “allows us to get the medication to the inmates easier and increases public safety in the community,” Coppinger said.

    About two-thirds of Essex County inmates are diagnosed with both substance abuse and mental health disorders. The sheriff’s department was housing 819 inmates as of Friday’s count.

    At Middleton Jail, 180 inmates receive MAT. About another 35 are treated through MAT at The Farm, which includes females from the Women In Transition program, who are driven there from the Salisbury facility.

    “Abundant evidence” shows the drugs used in MAT programs “reduce opioid use and opioid use disorder-related symptoms, and they reduce the risk of infectious disease transmission as well as criminal behavior associated with drug use,” according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

    “These medications also increase the likelihood that a person will remain in treatment, which itself is associated with lower risk of overdose mortality, reduced risk of HIV and Hepatitis C transmission, reduced criminal justice involvement, and greater likelihood of employment,” the institute reports.

    The roots of the MAT program at Middleton came after a 2018 federal lawsuit by an inmate, Geoffrey Pesce, who had been medically treated with methadone prior to his arrest and jailing for driving without a license.

    Pesce, along with the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts and a law firm, successfully sued for his access to methadone while at Middleton Jail.

    In the lawsuit, the federal court was asked to require ECSD to provide Pesce with the prescribed medication onsite or to transport him daily to a medical facility where he could get his daily dosage.

    “Pesce suffered opioid use disorder and had been in recovery for two years with help of doctor-prescribed medication,” the ACLU of Boston said. “Pesce struggled with addiction for nearly six years, experiencing unemployment, homelessness, and estrangement from his family and son. After his doctor prescribed medication-assisted treatment, he made a dramatic recovery.”

    The hope is with the continued treatment behind bars, individuals won’t want to seek drugs when they are released. Brooke Pessinis, a licensed mental health counselor affiliated with the MAT program, said the goal is “harm reduction” and readying the inmate for success when they leave lock up.

    The inmates are also given Narcan, a medication which can reverse an opioid overdose, when they leave, ECSD Assistant Superintendent Jason Faro said.

    The medication dispensed in MAT are “highly managed” and kept in a safe approved by the Drug Enforcement Administration, he said.

    “You’d probably need 100 sticks of dynamite to blow the door off of it,” Faro said of the safe.

    In October, the MAT program will be among discussion topics at the International Association of Chiefs of Police Conference being held this year in Boston.

    But off stage, anecdotally, on a local level, Faro said he has seen the benefits of the MAT program through a former inmate he occasionally runs into in the Merrimack Valley. The man has a lengthy criminal record that stretches back to when he was 17.

    After MAT treatment and release, the man has now reconnected with his family and children, obtained his commercial drivers’ license and appears to be thriving.

    Notably, Faro said his crimes were “all driven by drug use.”

    Follow staff reporter Jill Harmacinski on Twitter @EagleTribJill.

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    By Jill Harmacinski | Staff Writer

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  • West Nile virus detected in Haverhill

    West Nile virus detected in Haverhill

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    HAVERHILL — The state Department of Public Health has confirmed that mosquitoes collected locally tested positive for West Nile virus.

    The mosquitoes were among those captured at a surveillance site in Haverhill, according to Deborah Ketchen, health agent for nearby Merrimac, and that town’s Board of Health.

    The board urged its residents to take proper precautions and offered tips in a news release issued Thursday night, noting that the town’s risk level for the West Nile virus remained the same.

    It was not noted whether these mosquitoes were among those that tested positive for West Nile virus and Eastern equine encephalitis in Haverhill on July 30.

    Haverhill Mayor Melinda Barrett announced on the city’s website Aug. 2 that spraying for mosquitoes would begin three days later in a northeastern section of the community due to the positive findings.

    Trucks from the Northeast Massachusetts Mosquito Control District were to begin spraying the insecticide Zenivex E4 RTU in an area “bounded by Main Street to Kenzoa Avenue to Amesbury Road to Kenzoa Street to Center Street to Millvale Road to East Broadway to Old Ferry Road to Lincoln Avenue to Water Street then back to Main Street,” the city said.

    Public health surveillance is conduced in the state for both mosquito-borne illnesses. The highest risk for contracting WNV or EEE is from late July to the first fall frost, according to Merrimac health officials.

    Mosquitoes receive WNV and EEE by biting infected birds. People and animals contract these diseases by being bitten by an infected mosquito.

    Most people bitten by mosquitoes carrying WNV will either have no symptoms or very mild symptoms and recover on their own. People over age 50 have the highest risk of becoming seriously ill, the Merrimac officials said. Additional monitoring and testing of mosquitoes in Haverhill was expected.

    Merrimac health officials and Barrett encourage the public to take precautions, including using DEET mosquito repellant, wearing long sleeves and pants, and avoiding outdoor activities from dusk to dawn.

    Residents are also asked to check their property for containers of standing water that could attract mosquitoes. Tightly fitted screens are needed for windows and doors, the officials said.

    More information about WNV and EEE is available by calling the state Department of Public Health recorded information line at 1-866-MASS-WNV (1-866-627-7968), or the DPH Epidemiology Program at 617-983-6800.

    A fact sheet is available at mass.gov/doc/wnv-factsheet-english/download.

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    Staff Reports

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  • Merrimac health officials warn about West Nile virus

    Merrimac health officials warn about West Nile virus

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    MERRIMAC — Town health officials ask residents to take precautions after the discovery of mosquitoes infected with West Nile virus in nearby Haverhill.  

    The insects were among those trapped at a specific mosquito surveillance site, Merrimac Health Agent Deborah Ketchen and the town’s Board of Health announced in a news release Thursday night.  

    The state Department of Public Health later confirmed that the mosquitoes tested positive for the potentially deadly virus, the health officials said.

    The Health Board urged local residents to take proper precautions and offered tips, noting that the town’s risk level for West Nile virus remained the same.

    It was not noted whether these mosquitoes were among those that tested positive for West Nile virus and Eastern equine encephalitis in Haverhill on July 30.

    Last week, Newburyport confirmed a case of West Nile virus in the city and urged its residents to take precautions. None of the cases in either community involve infected humans.

    Haverhill Mayor Melinda Barrett announced on the city’s website Aug. 2 that spraying for mosquitoes would begin three days later in a northeastern section of the community due to the positive findings.

    Trucks from the Northeast Massachusetts Mosquito Control District were to begin spraying the insecticide Zenivex E4 RTU in an area “bounded by Main Street to Kenzoa Avenue to Amesbury Road to Kenzoa Street to Center Street to Millvale Road to East Broadway to Old Ferry Road to Lincoln Avenue to Water Street then back to Main Street,” the city said. 

    Public health surveillance is conduced in the state for both mosquito-borne illnesses. The highest risk for contracting WNV or EEE is from late July to the first fall frost, according to Merrimac officials. 

    Mosquitoes receive WNV and EEE by biting infected birds. People and animals contract these diseases by being bitten by an infected mosquito.

    Most people bitten by mosquitoes carrying WNV will either have no symptoms or very mild symptoms and recover on their own. People over age 50 have the highest risk of becoming seriously ill, the Merrimac officials said. Additional monitoring and testing of mosquitoes in Haverhill was expected.

    Merrimac health officials and Barrett encourage the public to take precautions, including using DEET mosquito repellant, wearing long sleeves and pants, and avoiding outdoor activities from dusk to dawn.

    Residents are also asked to check their property for containers of standing water that could attract mosquitoes. Tightly fitted screens are needed for windows and doors, the officials said.   

    More information about WNV and EEE is available by calling the state Department of Public Health recorded information line at 1-866-MASS-WNV (1-866-627-7968), or the DPH Epidemiology Program at 617-983-6800.

    A fact sheet is available at mass.gov/doc/wnv-factsheet-english/download.

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  • Women’s hockey tournament benefits cancer survivors

    Women’s hockey tournament benefits cancer survivors

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    HAVERHILL — More than 500 women will hit the ice this weekend with a goal of raising money for cancer survivorship services in the Merrimack Valley.

    The annual Cross Check Cancer Women’s Hockey Tournament will take place from Aug. 9 to 11 at the Valley Forums in Haverhill and Lawrence. The cancer survivorship program is designed to help adults transition to a post-cancer life.

    Games will also be played at HockeyTown U.S.A .in Saugus.

    The women’s tournament was founded by Keri Capobianco in 2016. Capobianco started and runs the Women’s Hockey League of Boston, which calls Haverhill, Methuen and Peabody rinks home. The league is a place where women ages 18 to 60-plus of different skill levels can play hockey.

    The tournament is open to all women, who travel from all over New England to participate.

    All proceeds benefit Dana-Farber Cancer Institute’s Adult Survivorship Program, which offers those 21 years old and older access to services that help adult patients find expertise, education and any support they may need.

    Women who’ve survived cancer or are in treatment have participated in the event over the years, Capobianco said.

    She was drawn to supporting the Dana-Farber program because it’s designed to help people get back to their passions after cancer, whether that’s hockey or another activity. It also places an emphasis on nutrition, exercise and women’s health issues.

    The tournament’s creation was led by a grassroots effort by Capobianco and women from the WHL of Boston eight years ago. In 2016, they were happy to raise $5,200, Capobianco said.

    Now, there are 40 teams signed up for the three-day event and funds raised have grown each year since that first tournament. In 2023, the teams raised more than $65,000. To date, they’ve been able to donate $179,000 to the survivorship program.

    “It’s grown dramatically,” Capobianco said.

    “You don’t see that often where 100% of the proceeds goes to Dana Farber,” tournament participant Christine Ray said. “It’s amazing what Keri (Capobianco) has been able to do with this tournament, especially managing 40 teams at three different rinks.”

    Ray, 59, of Bolton, is one of the many women who travels each year to play in the tournament. She’s played in all eight tournaments so far and her team is ready for the next one.

    Ray first learned to skate at age 43 and has been hooked on hockey ever since. But the summer games mean more than lacing up the skates to her.

    “It’s so much more than hockey,” Ray said. “It gives women a chance to get together and reconnect and do some good at the same time.”

    Ray has known Capobianco for several years by playing hockey with her. Ray formed a tournament team in 2016 to support her friend and has watched as the fundraiser grew to hundreds of women bonding over their passion for the sport as a way to help the cancer community.

    “It’s supporting cancer survivors and being able to play hockey and doing something healthy for ourselves at the same time,” Ray said.

    The goal is to surpass last year’s fundraiser and cross the overall $250,000 mark in its ninth year.

    “We’re always trying to outdo ourselves,” Capobianco said. “We want to hit $70,000 this year.”

    The three rinks are sure to be busy as games are set from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., but Capobianco said she wouldn’t have it any other way.

    The busyness means women are getting involved and doing their part to continue to benefit the mission of the tournament – cross check cancer.

    “Now we are able to connect these women who share the same passion for hockey and do some good in the world at the same time,” Capobianco said. “It’s a fantastic feeling.”

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    By Angelina Berube | aberube@eagletribune.com

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  • Opioid deaths drop 10%, but remain high

    Opioid deaths drop 10%, but remain high

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    BOSTON — The scourge of opioid addiction continues to affect Massachusetts, but new data shows a double-digit decrease in the number of overdose deaths in the past year.

    There were 2,125 confirmed or suspected opioid-related deaths in 2023 — which is 10%, or 232, fewer fatal overdoses than during the same period in 2022, according to a report released this week by the state Department of Public Health.

    Last year’s opioid-related overdose death rate also decreased by 10% to 30.2 per 100,000 people compared to 33.5 in 2022, DPH said.

    Health officials attributed the persistently high death rates to the effects of an “increasingly poisoned drug supply,” primarily with the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl.

    Fentanyl was present in 90% of the overdose deaths where a toxicology report was available, state officials noted.

    Preliminary data from the first three months of 2024 showed a continued decline in opioid-related overdose deaths, the agency said, with 507 confirmed and estimated deaths, a 9% drop from the same time period last year.

    Gov. Maura Healey said she is “encouraged” by the drop in fatal overdoses but the state needs to continue to focus on “prevention, treatment and recovery efforts to address the overdose crisis that continues to claim too many lives and devastate too many families in Massachusetts.”

    Substance abuse counselors welcomed the declining number of fatal opioid overdoses, but said the data shows that there is still more work to be done to help people struggling with substance use disorders.

    “While the number of opioid-related overdose deaths in the commonwealth remains unacceptably high, it is encouraging to see what we hope is a reversal of a long and painful trend,” Bridgewell President & CEO Chris Tuttle said in a statement. “The time is now to boost public investments and once and for all overcome the scourge of the opioid epidemic.”

    Nationally, there were 107,543 overdose deaths reported in the U.S. in 2023, a 3% decrease from the estimated 111,029 in 2022, according to recently released U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data.

    In New Hampshire, drug overdose deaths also declined by double digits in 2023, according to figures released in May by the state’s medical examiner and the National Centers for Disease Control.

    There were 430 deaths attributed to overdoses in 2023, an 11.7% decrease from 2022’s 487, according to the data.

    Curbing opioid addiction has been a major focus on Beacon Hill for a number of years with hundreds of millions of dollars being devoted to expanding treatment and prevention efforts.

    The state has set some of the strictest opioid-prescribing laws in the nation, including a cap on new prescriptions in a seven-day period and a requirement that doctors consult a state prescription monitoring database before prescribing an addictive opioid.

    Hundreds of millions of dollars are flowing into the state from multistate settlements with opioid makers and distributors, including $110 million from a $6 billion deal with OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family.

    Under state law, about 60% of that money will be deposited in the state’s opioid recovery fund, while the remainder will be distributed to communities.

    Earlier this week, House lawmakers were expected to take up a package of bills aimed at improving treatment of substance abuse disorders and reducing opioid overdose deaths.

    The plan would require private insurers to cover emergency opioid overdose-reversing drugs such as naloxone and require drug treatment facilities to provide two doses of overdose-reversal drugs when discharging patients, among other changes.

    Another provision would require licenses for recovery coaches, who are increasingly sent to emergency rooms, drug treatment centers and courtrooms to help addicts get clean.

    Backers of the plan said the goal is to integrate peer recovery coaches more into the state’s health care system, helping addicts who have taken the first steps toward recovery.

    Long-term recovery remains one of the biggest hurdles to breaking the cycle of addiction, they say.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Report: Injured workers at risk for opioid overdoses

    Report: Injured workers at risk for opioid overdoses

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    Workers who are injured on the job are at higher risk for fatal opioid-related overdoses, according to a new study, which calls for renewed efforts to reduce the stigma of drug addiction.

    The report, released Thursday by the state Department of Public Health, found that working-age Massachusetts residents who died between 2011 and 2020 were 35% more likely to have died of an opioid-related overdose if they had previously been injured at work.

    DPH researchers compiled information about individuals’ employment and work-related injury status from their workers’ compensation claims and linked it to data from their death certificates.

    Researchers reviewed the details of 4,304 working-age adults who died between 2011 and 2020 and found at least 17.2% had at least one workplace injury claim and died of an opioid-related overdose, according to the study.

    Public health officials say the study is the first linking the impact of work-related injuries to opioid-related overdose deaths.

    “Occupational injuries can take both a physical and mental toll, and those who suffer injuries at work may be discouraged from seeking help because of stigmatization and fear of losing their jobs,” Health and Human Services Secretary Kate Walsh said in a statement. “Avoiding or delaying care can lead to a preventable overdose death.”

    Walsh called for stepped-up efforts to “eliminate the stigma that accompanies substance use disorder in all sectors of society, including the workplace.”

    The release of the report comes as opioid overdose deaths remain devastatingly high in the Bay State, despite a slight decrease over the past year.

    There were 2,323 confirmed or suspected opioid-related deaths in Massachusetts from Oct. 1, 2022, to Sept. 30, 2023 — eight fewer than the same period in 2021, according to a report released in December by the health department.

    Health officials attributed the persistently high death rates to the effects of an “increasingly poisoned drug supply,” primarily with the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl.

    Fentanyl was present in 93% of the overdose deaths where a toxicology report was available, state officials noted.

    Curbing opioid addiction has been a major focus on Beacon Hill for a number of years with hundreds of millions of dollars being devoted to expanding treatment and prevention efforts.

    The state has set some of the strictest opioid-prescribing laws in the nation, including a cap on new prescriptions in a seven-day period and a requirement that doctors consult a state prescription monitoring database before prescribing an addictive opioid.

    The Opioid Recovery and Remediation Fund, created by the state Legislature in 2020, has received more than $101 million from settlements with drug makers and distributors over their alleged role in the opioid crisis, according to the Executive Office of Health and Human Services.

    More than 25,000 people have died from opioid-related overdoses in Massachusetts since 2011, according to state records.

    Nationally, fatal drug overdoses fell by roughly 3% in 2023, according data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    But the toll from fatal overdoses in 2023 remained high, claiming 107,543 lives, the federal agency said.

    Fentanyl and other synthetic opioids were responsible for approximately 70% of lives lost, while methamphetamine and other synthetic stimulants are responsible for approximately 30% of deaths, the CDC said.

    “The shift from plant-based drugs, like heroin and cocaine, to synthetic, chemical-based drugs, like fentanyl and methamphetamine, has resulted in the most dangerous and deadly drug crisis the United States has ever faced,” Anne Milgram, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, said in a recent statement.

    The DEA points to Mexican drug cartels, who it says are smuggling large quantities of fentanyl and other synthetic drugs manufactured in China into the country along the southern border.

    “The suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, and money launderers all play a role in the web of deliberate and calculated treachery orchestrated by these cartels,” she said.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • The Enigma of ‘Heat-Related’ Deaths

    The Enigma of ‘Heat-Related’ Deaths

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    The autopsy should have been a piece of cake. My patient had a history of widely metastatic cancer, which was pretty straightforward as far as causes of death go. Entering the various body cavities, my colleague and I found what we anticipated: Nearly every organ was riddled with tumors. But after we had completed the work, I realized that I knew why the patient had died, but not why he’d died that day. We found no evidence of a heart attack or blood clot or ruptured bowel. Nothing to explain his sudden demise. Yes, he had advanced cancer—but he’d been living with that cancer the day before he died, and over many weeks and months preceding. I asked my colleague what he thought. Perhaps there had been some subtle change in the patient’s blood chemistry, or in his heart’s electrical signaling, that we simply couldn’t see? “I guess the patient just up and died,” he said.

    I’m a hospital pathologist; my profession is one of many trying to explain the end of life. In that role, I have learned time and again that even the most thorough medical exams leave behind uncertainty. Take the current spate of heat-related fatalities brought on by a summer of record-breaking temperatures. Residents of Phoenix endured a month of consecutive 110-degree days. People have been literally sizzling on sidewalks. And news organizations are taking note of what is said to be a growing body count: 39 heat deaths in Maricopa County, Arizona; 10 in Laredo, Texas. But the precision of these figures is illusory. Cause of death cannot be measured as exactly as the temperature, and what qualifies as “heat-related” will always be a judgment call: Some people die from heat; others just up and die when it happens to be hot.

    Mortality is contested ground, a place where different types of knowledge are in conflict. In Clark County, Nevada, for example, coroners spend weeks investigating possible heat-related deaths. Families are interviewed, death scenes are inspected, and medical tests are performed. The coroner must factor in all of these sources of information because no single autopsy finding can definitively diagnose a heat fatality. A victim may be found to have suffered from hyperthermia—an abnormally high body temperature—or they may be tossed into the more subjective bucket of those who died from ”environmental heat stress.”

    Very few deaths undergo such an extensive forensic examination in the first place. Most of the time, the circumstances appear straightforward—a 75-year-old has a stroke; a smoker succumbs to an exacerbation of his chronic lung disease—and the patient’s primary-care doctor or hospital physician completes the death certificate on their own. But heat silently worsens many preexisting conditions; oppressive temperatures can cause an already dysfunctional organ to fail. A recent study out of China estimated that mortality from heart attacks can rise as much as 74 percent during a severe, several-day heat wave. Another study from the U.S. found that even routine temperature fluctuations can subtly alter kidney function, cholesterol levels, and blood counts. Physicians can’t easily tease out these influences. If an elderly man on a park bench suddenly slouches over from a heart attack in 90-degree weather, it’s hard to say for sure whether the heat was what did him in. Epidemiologists must come to the rescue, using statistics to uncover those hidden causes at the population level. This bird’s-eye view shows a simple fact: Bad weather means more death. But it still doesn’t tell us what to think about the man on the bench.

    Research (and common sense) tells us that some individuals are going to be especially vulnerable to climate risks. Poverty, physical labor, substandard housing, advanced age, and medical comorbidities all put one in greater danger of experiencing heat-related illness. The weather has a way of kicking you while you’re down, and the wealthy and able-bodied are better able to dodge the blows. A financial struggle as small as an unpaid $51 portion of an electricity bill can prove deadly in the summer. In the autopsies I’ve performed, a patient’s family, medical record, and living situation often told a story of long-term social neglect. But there was no place on the death certificate for me to describe these tragic circumstances. There was certainly no checkbox to indicate that climate change contributed to a fatality. Such matters were out of my jurisdiction.

    The public-health approach to assessing deaths has its own problems. Mostly it’s confusing. Reams of scientific studies have reported on hundreds of different risk factors for mortality. Sultry weather appears to be dangerous, but so do skipping breakfast, taking naps, and receiving care from a male doctor. Researchers have declared just about everything a major killer. A few months ago, the surgeon general announced that feeling disconnected is as deadly as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day. The FDA commissioner has said that misinformation is the nation’s leading cause of premature death. And is poverty or medical error the fourth-leading cause? I can’t keep track.

    With so many mortality statistics at our disposal, which ones get emphasized can be more a matter of politics than science. Liberals see the current heat wave—and its wave of heat-related deaths—as an urgent call to action to combat climate change, while conservatives dismiss this concern as a mental disorder. A recent Wall Street Journal op-ed concluded that worrying about climate change is irrational, because “if heat waves were as deadly as the press proclaims, Homo sapiens couldn’t have survived thousands of years without air conditioning.” (Humans survived thousands of years without penicillin, but syphilis was still a net negative.) Similarly, when COVID became the third-leading cause of death in the U.S., pandemic skeptics said it was a fiction: Victims were dying “with COVID,” not “from COVID.” Because many people who died of SARS-CoV-2 had underlying risk factors, some politicians and doctors brushed off the official numbers as hopelessly confounded. Who could say whether the virus had killed anyone at all?

    The dismissal of COVID’s carnage was mostly cynical and unscientific. But it’s true that death certificates paint one picture of the pandemic, and excess-death calculations paint another. Scientists will be debating COVID’s exact body count for decades. Fatalities from heat are subject to similar ambiguities, even as their determination comes with real-world consequences. In June, for example, officials from Multnomah County, Oregon—where Portland is located—sued oil and gas producers over the effects of a 2021 heat wave that resulted in 69 heat-related deaths, as officially recorded. This statistic will likely be subjected to intense cross-examination. The pandemic showed us that casting doubt on the deceased is a convenient strategy.

    No matter how we count the bodies, extreme weather leads to suffering—especially among the most vulnerable members of society. A lot of people have already perished during this summer’s heat wave. Their passing is more than a coincidence—not all of them just up and died.

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    Benjamin Mazer

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