Abstract
The coronial files of all 176 heroin-related fatalities that occurred in the South Western Sydney region over the period 1992-96 were inspected. Heroin-related fatalities rose from 20 in 1992 to 54 in 1996. The mean age of cases was 29.9 years, 89% were male and 92% were classified as dependent on heroin at the time of death. There was a significant increase over the study period in the proportion of fatalities that occurred in public settings. No intervention occurred in 71% of cases. Morphine concentrations rose over the study period from 0.16 mg/l in 1992 to 0.37 mg/l in 1996. The majority of cases involved heroin in combination with other drugs: alcohol (40%), benzodiazepines (30%) and antidepressants (9%). In only a third of cases was morphine the sole drug detected.
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Darke, S., & Ross, J. (1999). Heroin-related deaths in South Western Sydney, Australia, 1992-96. Drug and Alcohol Review, 18(1), 39–45. https://doi.org/10.1080/09595239996743
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