Heroin’s lethal comeback

The urban drug scourge of the 1960s and ’70s is enjoying a nationwide resurgence—and destroying lives.

Why is heroin use soaring?

It’s become a dirt-cheap alternative to the prescription opiates abused by millions of Americans. With a dose of heroin now selling for as little as $5 to $10, about 669,000 people admitted using heroin in 2012, almost double the number in 2007, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health. The crisis includes cities such as Chicago and New York, but heroin use has also spread to the suburbs and rural areas in the Midwest and New England. It now affects the middle class and the wealthy—underscored this month by the overdose death of actor Philip Seymour Hoffman, who was found with a needle in his arm and 50 glassine bags of the drug. Heroin addiction has grown so widespread in rural Vermont that Gov. Peter Shumlin devoted his entire State of the State address to the epidemic, which he said had become “a full-blown crisis” in his state. “It’s everywhere,” said DEA Special Agent James Hunt. “It is being used by the young, middle-aged, even cops’ kids and soccer moms.”

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