Today this blog looks at the sad reality of drug abuse, fueled by a legal prescription drug.
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.In places like Portsmouth,Ohio, Florida , Kentucky , Ontario,Canada, and even in your home town OxyContin has become today's drug of choice.
With the majority of users injecting the drug, overdosing isn't uncommon nor is the transmission of the deadly disease; Hepatitis C.
Prescription drug use has become a national crisis according to a 2010 released White House study revealing that between "1998 and 2008" substance abuse treatment admissions for prescription pain relievers increased by 400 percent.
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This 2009 documentary from "Vanguard" reports on Florida's epidemic.
Watch the complete 45 minute video "here"
In The News
Sons and daughters, lost to a pill epidemic
Sarasota congressman's bill seeks pill mill crackdown
March 4th Full story: News Press SARASOTA - A Florida congressman is unveiling legislation to crack down on illegal pill mills with longer prison sentences and steeper fines.
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28 Drug Suspects Arrested
March 4th Full story: WTAJ Acting Attorney General Bill Ryan said the arrests are the result of a six month investigation into the street-level dealings of cocaine, crack cocaine, heroin, marijuana, LSD and the powerful prescription drugs Percocet, Oxycontin, Morphine, Soma, and Roxicodone.
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Florida doctor pleads guilty to helping Eastern Kentucky prescription-drug ring
Full story: Lexington Herald-Leader
A Florida doctor has admitted he took part in stoking the crippling abuse of prescription drugs in Eastern Kentucky by writing prescriptions for 25,000 pain pills to people in a drug ring.
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Young lives wrecked by prescription drug epidemic in Southern Ohio "Such is life in Scioto County, a Southern Ohio county on the Ohio river where a prescription drug epidemic crosses all socioeconomic lines, wrecking young lives from ramshackle trailer parks to cushy suburban homes. The pain pills come in varying forms and dosages, but there is no question which one is king -- OxyContin, the fifth most prescribed drug in the world. Fueled in part by a half-dozen legally operating pain clinics that dot Scioto County, doling out an estimated 35 million pills a year, the prescription drug problem has taken its toll in numerous ways: spiraling hepatitis C rates, a thriving pill-based underground economy and nearly one in 10 babies born addicted to drugs"
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Teen pill-poppers on the rise: survey
Full story: Montreal Gazette
Recreational use of painkiller OxyContin jumps in Eastern Ontario, even as it levels off in rest of province Photograph by: Jeff Siner, The Charlotte Observer One in five Eastern Ontario high-school students has taken highly addictive painkillers such as OxyContin, Percocet and Demerol.
The manufacturer of OxyContin, Purdue Pharma, originally marketed OxyContin as an appropriate treatment for chronic, moderate to severe, non-cancer pain. In the past, such strong opioids were used only for intractable, severe pain. So how did we end up with a national prescription pill problem and opiate addiction in rural areas? Following is a brief history of what has happened since OxyContin was introduced as a pain management drug in 1996.
OxyContin’s release onto the market in 1996 coincided with a national movement to encourage doctors to treat pain more aggressively. The drug manufacturer of OxyContin, Purdue Pharma, originally thought the drug unattractive for addicts due to a time-release coating. But soon people found ways to crush the pills to snort or inject. These two events, added to the tendency of U.S. citizens to share prescription medications, gave perfect recipe for an opioid addiction disaster. At that time, few states had prescription monitoring programs, which also allowed the problem to grow and fester. Addicts could obtain opioid prescriptions from more than one doctor at a time, with no way for the doctor to detect the problem.
OxyContin was marketed aggressively to small town family doctors who didn’t have much experience treating chronic pain with powerful opioids. Few had the training to identify or treat addiction when it did develop. Rural areas had few places doctors could send patients who developed problems with opioid pain medications. By 2003, primary care doctors, with little or no experience or training in the treatment of long-term pain or addiction were prescribing about half of all the OxyContin prescriptions written in the country. (1)
1. A national movement to encourage doctors to treat pain more aggressively
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At the congressional hearing in 2002, a Purdue Pharma representative said that the company was working on a re-formulation of OxyContin, to make it harder to use intravenously. This representative said they expected to have the re-formulated pill on the market within a few years. (4)
In 2010, this new preparation was finally released. It contains a substance that makes the pill turn into a gluey resin, difficult to snort or inject. Addicts don’t like the new OxyContin. They can’t inject this form of OxyContin, and it has a lower street value.
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Like most strong medications, OxyContin can be used correctly for pain management, or can be misused and cause harm to people and their families. Do you think OxyContin is bad or evil? Is it too addictive or caused too many social problems? And what about manufacturers of opioid medications? How liable should they be for the addictive effects of drugs? But is OxyContin the problem? And how can we all work to reduce the risk of addiction to prescription drugs?
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1. Barry Meier, Pain Killer: A “Wonder” Drug’s Trail of Addiction and Death (Rodale Books, 2003)2. General Accounting Office OxyContin Abuse and Diversion report GAO-04-110, 2003.3. Washington Times, “Company Admits Painkiller Deceit,” May 11, 2007.4. United States Senate. Congressional hearing of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, on Examining the Effects of the Painkiller OxyContin, 107th Congress, Second Session, February, 2002.
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