美国国家公共电台 NPR 'Heroin(e)': The Women Fighting Addiction In Appalachia(在线收听

 

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

The opioid epidemic has hit Huntington, W. Va., very hard with an overdose rate 10 times the national average. Documentary filmmaker Elaine McMillion Sheldon chose Huntington as the setting for her short doc about America's opioid crisis now nominated for an Oscar. It's called "Heroin(e)." That's the drug heroin within an E added. One of those heroines is the town's fire chief, Jan Rader. She spends her days in an endless cycle of trying to revive addicts who have ODed.

(SOUNDBITE OF DOCUMENTARY, "HEROIN(E).")

JAN RADER: You know, we conservatively estimated that Cabell County - and we're talking 96,000 people - spent probably about $100 million in health care costs associated with IV drug use in 2015. That's one small county in one small state.

MONTAGNE: Another heroine is Patricia Keller. She's the judge of the town's drug court, administering justice and compassion to those returning to her courtroom often again and again. We are joined by Chief Rader and Judge Keller. Welcome.

PATRICIA KELLER: Thank you.

RADER: Thank you very much.

MONTAGNE: All right. I'm going to start with you, Chief Rader. Why has Huntington been hit so hard by this terrible opioid epidemic?

RADER: Well, I think that West Virginia in general is more of a blue-collar state. And we have a lot of people that have injuries, back injuries, knee injuries, things like that. So there have been a lot of pain medication that has been prescribed to them. Then people have become addicted to that pain medicine.

MONTAGNE: But in the documentary, you speak about a certain hopelessness, a culture that's disappeared, the sort of things that might drive someone into addiction.

RADER: Certainly, I think that hopelessness is a big part of it, you know? It's been a dying town for some time, with industry leaving and things like that. So there is a lot of hopelessness that surrounds the Appalachian region in general.

MONTAGNE: We see you, Chief Rader, arriving to find a young woman dead. But most of the time in this film, you're reviving people with this drug Narcan that reverses opioid overdoses. And, you know, in the film, there's a meeting where one resident says almost logically, you know, aren't you enabling these folks?

RADER: Yes. We get that question a lot. But, you know, I think it's quite the opposite. I feel like we're treating people with substance use disorder even subhuman, not just like a second-class citizen - but subhuman. And, you know, a lot of people that study addiction say that the opposite of addiction is community. And we need to be helping them and finding out why they are in this situation and try to help lift them out of that.

MONTAGNE: You say you'd rather save somebody 50 times because that's 50 chances to get them into long-term recovery.

RADER: Death is final. So, I mean, how can I judge somebody and say, no, you've had enough Narcan, and you don't deserve anymore? I mean, I just can't even fathom that. I can't wrap my brain around that. And you have to be alive to experience long-term recovery. And people do go into long-term recovery.

KELLER: This is Judge Keller. Let me interrupt the chief here for just a moment. I want to address that one point that you made about continuing the use of Narcan on people and the questions that we get. I run - or I started the drug court program in our county. And we had a graduation not long ago where several of our graduates got up and spoke about having gone through the revival process, being Narcaned, as they say, 15 times. And yet they were standing there in drug court, graduating, becoming very productive citizens, employed and all because they had been Narcaned enough time to get them to the point that they were ready to enter and maintain long-term recovery.

MONTAGNE: You know, I have to say, though, watching the film and the two of you in action under this kind of pressure on what seemed like almost an hour-by-hour basis, I just wondered how you do, in fact, remain so hopeful and optimistic when you're seeing people who don't seem to care whether they live or die.

RADER: Well, you see a very short period of time in that film. But what you don't see is we sit, and we talk to these individuals. We get to know them. We know their backstory. And it's heartbreaking. But, you know, even a month clean is just to be celebrated. And Judge Keller and myself - we get to see people in long-term recovery. Now, we see a lot of sad things. Some people don't make it out, and they actually die from their disease process. But we see many people that are in long-term recovery that are in celebration of what they have experienced.

MONTAGNE: Well, this film is up for an Academy Award. And I'm just wondering if - with all the attention that will be paid to it and this problem, do you think that will make a difference?

RADER: I think it makes a difference every day. The fact that it's reaching so many people - it's starting conversations. And that's how it has to begin. We didn't get into this situation overnight. And we certainly aren't going to get out of it overnight.

MONTAGNE: The documentary short is called "Heroin(e)", shot in Huntington, W. Va. It features Fire Chief Jan Rader and Judge Patricia Keller. Thanks so much for joining us.

KELLER: Thank you.

RADER: Thank you.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

MONTAGNE: Are you excited about going out to the Oscars?

KELLER: Excited and nervous. I'm not really that dress-up girl. And they won't let me bling out my robe to wear or let Jan wear her fire chief uniform. So...

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/npr2018/3/424306.html