Michael Dixon, who has helped dozens of people recover from drug abuse, says the lure of opioids is so powerful that it can make a person beg their family for $10.
Dixon oversees a treatment program and said opioid use is spreading throughout the Phoenix area.
“From our perspective, especially over the last couple of years, it’s definitely gotten worse, unfortunately. We see a lot more people specifically with opioid addiction coming in,” said Dixon.
Maricopa County Department of Public Health reported that opioid overdose deaths have risen from 993 in 2019 to 1,434 last year.
The county received $4.7 million in aid to combat the opioid crisis that will be, “funding evidence-based recovery and prevention programs,” said Maricopa County Board of Supervisors Chairman Bill Gates, District 3.
The cartel plays a large role in the transportation of illicit drugs coming into the country and Phoenix is the first stop, according to Cheri Oz, special agent in charge with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Addiction treatment centers are taking action, but there is no set date for the disbursement of funds.
Financially fighting back
Deposit of the $4.7 million from the national opioid settlement initiates the estimated $80 million payout that the county and local jurisdictions will receive over the next 18 years, according to a press release from the Department of Public Health.
Approximately $2.3 million from the first payment is set to be distributed across the county and Phoenix will see a little over $1 million of the administered funding.
Funding will support treatment, recovery and support for people who are affected or at risk of opioid abuse as well as the prevention of opioid dependency.
The Department of Public Health will serve as the lead agency in the disbursement of funds.
Any money spent must be for an approved use per the One Arizona Agreement. This plan provides 90 cities and towns and all 15 counties with settlement money from pharmaceutical supply companies.
Jeanene Fowler, program operations administrator at the Department of Public Health, says this settlement gives the county an advantage to respond appropriately to the opioid crisis within the community.
“We’re hoping to support these cities and towns by being that leader in terms of pulling the data together so that they can make data-informed decisions about their money,” said Fowler.
Saying no could save a life
As a clinical director, Dixon thinks enabling behaviors like allowing a person struggling with addiction to use at a loved one's house to make sure that they're breathing or don't overdose is what keeps people sick.
"The most important part of (treatment) based on our experience as well as mine personally is to see family involvement and setting boundaries they're afraid to set. Education is great, but knowledge without action is nothing," he said.
Sanctuary Recovery Centers offers customized inpatient and outpatient treatment programs that use evidence-based approaches to help cope with recovering from drug addiction. Treatment focuses around medical and psychiatric services as well as mindfulness training, nutrition therapy and art/music therapy.
"Through our lens, we want to give (patients) the best probability of success," said Dixon.
Addiction is powerful as an average of 44 people died each day in 2020 from opioid-related overdoses in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Last year, the Department of Health Services reported over 2,000 Arizonians died from opioid overdoses.
"Somehow we got afraid to tell people no," Oz. said.
So what can members of the community do to help curb the number of opioid overdose deaths?
Ethan Ogden, admissions and outreach coordinator at Sanctuary Recovery Centers, says telling someone no can be incredibly difficult but can be effective in getting someone to change their thinking.
"The best thing we can do to decrease usage is have conversations with the people that we love… we all have to work together to make it stop," said Oz.
The opioid pipeline
The Sinaloa Cartel is the main source of drug trafficking as they own the trafficking routes in Mexico that go into the city, according to Oz.
"The cartel is making manufacturing and bringing the dope here. Location (wise) we're getting it first because of our proximity to Mexico, to the headquarters, to the base of the Sinaloa Cartel. If we were further north it would be different, but it just stops here first…. The cartel is the problem," she said. "Society needs to know that this is violent, this is dangerous, this is deadly and the people who are the predators will be held accountable, they will be taken to justice."
A big win for the DEA was taking down infamous cartel leader Rafael Caro-Quintero, who was taken into Mexican custody and extradited to the U.S.
After Caro-Quintero was released from a Mexican prison in 2013, he was on the FBI's list of the 10 most wanted fugitives for allegedly killing DEA agent Kiki Camarena and trafficking illicit drugs.
If you or a loved one is struggling with opioid addiction, visit the Opioid Assistance and Referral Line website or call the free, confidential hotline at 1-888-688-4222.