Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Arthritis / August 2007
Rise in Abuse of Prescription Painkiller
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california_chief - 21 Aug 2007 21:46 GMT South, Appalachia Beset by Rapid Rise in Abuse of Prescription Painkiller Hydrocodone Tuesday, August 21, 2007 11:36 PDT
GILBERT, West Virginia -- When his craving for painkillers got to be too much, Steve Dotson lay down and let his wife drive a car over his leg. It hurt, but he could dismiss the pain with thoughts of the medicated bliss that would follow.
Soon, he lost his house, the state took his children away and he was spending nights under a bridge, where he hoped to die.
"You get to where you don't even want them (pills) anymore, you just do them so you can get through the day," said the 43-year-old southern West Virginia resident.
Dotson is one of millions of Americans who have experienced the harm that can come from addiction to the prescription narcotic hydrocodone. Less regulated than similar prescription painkillers, drugs containing hydrocodone have quietly become the most widely prescribed _ and, perhaps, widely abused _ opiate painkillers on the market.
With 124 million prescriptions in 2005, drugs containing hydrocodone are the most popular of their type in the country, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Office of Diversion Control. They are sold under hundreds of brand names and generic titles, and hydrocodone can be found in medication ranging from cough syrup to painkillers.
The most commonly prescribed product combines hydrocodone and acetaminophen, which is marketed under brand names like Vicodin and Lortab.
The DEA reported in 2006 that legal retail distribution of drugs with hydrocodone had grown by roughly 66 percent nationwide since 2001.
Its illicit use had grown as well, and by 2005, hydrocodone was the most frequently encountered pharmaceutical of its kind in drug evidence submitted to the National Forensic Laboratory Information System. The Drug Abuse Warning Network has said hydrocodone products are linked to more emergency room visits than any other prescription painkiller.
As abuse has grown, treatment for addiction and dependence has become more common _ and more controversial.
While abstinence-based programs that encourage addicts to quit painkillers like hydrocodone are common, there is also a widespread drug-based way of treating the addiction with methadone, another opioid.
In many parts of the country, methadone clinics have drawn fire from residents and politicians who contend they attract crime. West Virginia's legislature earlier this year passed a moratorium on any new clinics that use methadone until a study can be completed.
"A lot of these people are soccer moms buying Vicodin off the Internet," said Timothy Lepak, a Connecticut-based advocate for alternative addiction treatments. "They wouldn't even think of going to a methadone clinic."
Some physicians now prescribe Buprenorphine, another drug, to help patients cope with addictions. But only about 11,000 physicians nationally are certified to prescribe it, experts said.
The extent of prescription painkiller abuse in central Appalachia drew national attention about five years ago, when oxycodone was the drug of choice for many people. The drug, most commonly known under the brand name OxyContin, was so widely abused it earned the nickname "hillbilly heroin."
As OxyContin came under scrutiny, doctors were more careful about how they prescribed it. Many switched to hydrocodone products, which were already popular but didn't have the same stigma.
All 50 states saw increases in the distribution of hydrocodone between 2001 and 2005. But the trend was particularly significant in the South, where all of the top 10 states in terms of increased distribution are located, the DEA says. Four of the top five _ Tennessee, West Virginia, Kentucky and Alabama _ include parts of Appalachia.
Authorities say hydrocodone is so popular in this region partly because it's easy to acquire. Street drugs like heroin are harder to come by in sparsely populated rural areas. Prescription painkillers can be found at every pharmacy and pain clinic, as well as ordered over the Internet.
"When I started in this field, the primary client was involved with alcohol," says David Bailey, a community resource specialist with the West Virginia Prevention Resource Center.
"I wish it were still alcohol. Not that that's not a very dangerous drug, but the addiction (to painkillers) seems to be much more intense, much more severe within a shorter period of time."
It is a mistake to focus on a single drug, said Dr. Peter Cohen, medical director of the Maryland Alcohol and Drug Abuse Administration. He pointed out that while hydrocodone abuse has grown slightly in Maryland since 2002, it is still far less commonly abused than street drugs like heroin.
From 2005 to 2006, the number of people admitted to Maryland drug rehabilitation programs with hydrocodone addictions grew from 284 to 596, according to figures from the drug abuse administration. But the number of heroin addicts admitted to treatment in the same period stayed at nearly 16,000.
The problem is not hydrocodone or even opiates per se, Cohen said, but addiction itself.
"If you're an opiate addict, you're going to find something, based on what's available and what you prefer," he said.
The DEA is considering moving drugs containing hydrocodone from being classified as so-called Schedule III drugs to being Schedule II drugs. The reclassification would mean it would be harder to obtain refills. Doctors and pharmacies would also have to keep more stringent records about how many prescriptions are written and filled.
Dotson has been off drugs since a religious experience in 2001. He got a job and is a board member of Strong Through Our Plan, a local anti-drug group.
He is determined to stay off drugs, and recently chose to pull out his own tooth with pliers to avoid the temptation of receiving a prescription for a hydrocodone-based painkiller after the extraction.
On a recent day, Dotson pointed out the spot under the bridge where he lived and pointed to the spot in the Guyandotte River where he was baptized after getting clean. Not all of his friends were so lucky, he said.
"You've got three choices," he said. "You either die, go to prison or get saved. Mostly, people around here are dying."
Kelly C. - 22 Aug 2007 00:52 GMT My BIL is a 'codone' addict. He's gone through every family member, every friend, every acquaintance, and only God knows where he is right now, or what he's doing.
He's shot himself, and stabbed himself, in order to get pain meds. He's stolen money and possessions from anyone that will let him get close enough. He's committed mail fraud, written hundreds of bad checks, stolen identities, and taken money from the till of every place he's worked for the last few years.
We just keep waiting for the phone to ring. We pray it will be because he's in jail, and not because he's dead.
Kelly C.
> South, Appalachia Beset by Rapid Rise in Abuse of Prescription Painkiller > Hydrocodone [quoted text clipped - 140 lines] > "You've got three choices," he said. "You either die, go to prison or get > saved. Mostly, people around here are dying." d'huit - 26 Aug 2007 03:28 GMT My BIL is a 'codone' addict. He's gone through every family member, every friend, every acquaintance, and only God knows where he is right now, or what he's doing.
He's shot himself, and stabbed himself, in order to get pain meds. He's stolen money and possessions from anyone that will let him get close enough. He's committed mail fraud, written hundreds of bad checks, stolen identities, and taken money from the till of every place he's worked for the last few years.
We just keep waiting for the phone to ring. We pray it will be because he's in jail, and not because he's dead.
Kelly C.
((((((((((((((((((((((((kelly)))))))))))))))))))))))) we have an addict, too, in our family (almost had 2, but the second one turned his life around. i bless them both and pray for them both.). this one, a nephew, even stole injectable hospice morphene, while his grandfather/my father was dying under hospice care. he's also previously stolen my pain pills from my doorstep (3 months worth), when the mailman dropped them off there (easy to tell they were drugs with medco on the return address), within minutes of the mailman leaving. mailman asked me if i noticed he put them on my doorstep the day before--i'd found only the rest of my mail. (at first, i didn't/couldn't believe it was my nephew who took them.) and another 3 months' prescription from my medicine cabinet--within two weeks from that episode (when the first 3 months worth were replaced--mailman handed those to me, when i asked him to make sure they got into my hands). he left me with just 10 painpills (he knows how badly i need them, when i do.) out of six months worth in all. it couldn't have been anybody else, because nobody but him was here that day, both times. by the time i warned my sister to hide my father's drugs, when i found out he was going to visit his grandfather, it was too late. he'd already been there and gone, and almost 2 boxes of the 3 full boxes of morphene had been left emptied (guess he couldn't hide any more than that in his pockets and clothing.). i hide things like that now, especially when i know he's coming over.
kate
> South, Appalachia Beset by Rapid Rise in Abuse of Prescription Painkiller > Hydrocodone [quoted text clipped - 140 lines] > "You've got three choices," he said. "You either die, go to prison or get > saved. Mostly, people around here are dying." Kelly C. - 26 Aug 2007 04:05 GMT Damon is no longer welcome in the homes of any family member. He doesn't just take the pain meds. He actively searches for money, jewelry, coins, weapons, anything he can take and pawn.
It's going to take a major turnaround to make him trustworthy again.
Kelly C.
> My BIL is a 'codone' addict. He's gone through every family member, every > friend, every acquaintance, and only God knows where he is right now, or [quoted text clipped - 209 lines] >> "You've got three choices," he said. "You either die, go to prison or get >> saved. Mostly, people around here are dying." d'huit - 26 Aug 2007 04:34 GMT Damon is no longer welcome in the homes of any family member. He doesn't just take the pain meds. He actively searches for money, jewelry, coins, weapons, anything he can take and pawn.
It's going to take a major turnaround to make him trustworthy again.
Kelly C.
no doubt. broken trust is broken trust. earning it back is a long and difficult journey.
kate
> My BIL is a 'codone' addict. He's gone through every family member, every > friend, every acquaintance, and only God knows where he is right now, or [quoted text clipped - 209 lines] >> "You've got three choices," he said. "You either die, go to prison or get >> saved. Mostly, people around here are dying." california_chief - 26 Aug 2007 04:46 GMT Kate wrote:
> i hide things like that now, especially when i know he's coming over. Someone like that would never be welcome into my home.
You have your own problems and don't need to have them compounded by some rotten, spoiled kid like him.
d'huit - 26 Aug 2007 06:25 GMT Kate wrote:
> i hide things like that now, especially when i know he's coming over. Someone like that would never be welcome into my home.
You have your own problems and don't need to have them compounded by some rotten, spoiled kid like him.
i understand your feelings, chief. and thank you for caring about me.
no, chief. he wasn't a rotten, spoiled kid. he was an extrememly bright and very sensitive child, loving and very giving of himself. and i know he was a very neglected and emotionally/physically abused young kid of 12 or 13, when he turned to drugs, during a prolonged and *very ugly* divorce situation between his parents. (his younger brother developed an eating disorder, during this same period, and struggles with that to this day.) this was many years ago, before child abuse had the noteriety it does today.
i know he does try very hard to stay clean now, with n/a's help, and he's an adult now, in his late 40s. but he falls off the wagon occassionally and has to climb back up on it and start all over again. and he does do that, with encouragement, when the major stress that triggered it all is behind him and then he becomes himself again, until the next major stressful event in his life.
drug use for him is almost like some kind of weird variation of post traumatic stress syndrome reaction. (or at least it appears to me to be very similar to what some of my drugged-out friends had, when they returned from nam, but for very different specific reasons, obviously. but i'm no expert, i can only describe what i've observed.) once this kid was hooked, the drugs kept calling to him, like it was some kind of panacea for the emotional/psychological/physical abuse pain and/or loss. i think the losing of his grandmother and then experiencing losing his grandfather too, in so short a timeframe, triggered it this time.
i could be all wet, cuz i'm not a professional, but that's how i see it, because that's the pattern i've observed throughout his life. i think i was too young to know and really understand what the hell i was seeing, in the beginning. that is, if i really have put the pieces of the puzzle together correctly. i'm not certain, but that's how the pieces seem to fit together.
he really is a worthwhile human being. but he does have a drug problem.
kate
Paul G. - 26 Aug 2007 10:03 GMT One thing to keep in mind when saying prescrip drugs are on the rise. The population is getting older, pain isn't seen as something to just "deal with" Dr's are much more sympathetic to people with chronic pain.
Sure there is abuse, there always will be. But lets not get so hasty we throw the baby out with the bath water.
Addiction predisposition is in the person long before they received their first pain-killer.
johnie - 26 Aug 2007 14:42 GMT > Sure there is abuse, there always will be. But lets not get so hasty > we throw the baby out with the bath water. > > Addiction predisposition is in the person long before they received > their first pain-killer. AND, And lets not forget that the ratio of addiction among Pain Patients has remained fairly constant. It is still only around 1% despite the mileage irresponsible journalists try to get out of a few sensationalized incidents.
johnie
Kelly C. - 27 Aug 2007 03:54 GMT > One thing to keep in mind when saying prescrip drugs are on the rise. > The population is getting older, pain isn't seen as something to just [quoted text clipped - 6 lines] > Addiction predisposition is in the person long before they received > their first pain-killer. I absolutely believe this to be true. Addiction is a theme in my husband's family. His other brother was in treatment for alcohol addiction before he was 21, and has managed to stay clean and sober since then.
We are not unwilling to help Damon at all. We are unwilling to enable his theft and deceit. If he really wanted our help, and we knew he wasn't just fabricating, we'd be first in line behind his mother.
I've known this man since he was 8 years old. It's very hard to reconcile the person he is on drugs, with the real person I used to know.
Kelly C.
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