Summer House
Legal Drugs Kill Far More Than Illegal, Florida Says Jul 08, 2008
New York Times — From “Scarface” to “Miami Vice,”Florida’s drug problem has been portrayed as the story of a single narcotic: cocaine. But for Floridians, prescription drugs are increasingly a far more lethal habit.
An analysis of autopsies in 2007 released this week by the Florida Medical Examiners Commission found that the rate of deaths caused by prescription drugs was three times the rate of deaths caused by all illicit drugs combined.
Law enforcement officials said that the shift toward prescription-drug-abuse, which began here about eight years ago, showed no sign of letting up and that the state must do more to control it.
“You have health care providers involved, you have doctor shoppers, and then there are crimes like robbing drug shipments,” said Jeff Beasley, a drug intelligence inspector for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, which co-sponsored the study. “There is a multitude of ways to get these drugs, and that’s what makes things complicated.”
The report’s findings track with similar studies by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, which has found that roughly seven million Americans are abusing prescription drugs. If accurate, that would be an increase of 80 percent in six years and more than the total abusing cocaine, heroin, hallucinogens, Ecstasy and inhalants.
The Florida report analyzed 168,900 deaths statewide. Cocaine, heroin and all methamphetamines caused 989 deaths, it found, while legal opiods — strong painkillers in brand-name drugs like Vicodin and OxyContin — caused 2,328.
Drugs with benzodiazepine, mainly depressants like Valium and Xanax, led to 743 deaths. Alcohol was the most commonly occurring drug, appearing in the bodies of 4,179 of the dead and judged the cause of death of 466 — fewer than cocaine (843) but more than methamphetamine (25) and marijuana (0).
The study also found that while the number of people who died with heroin in their bodies increased 14 percent in 2007, to 110, deaths related to the opioid oxycodone increased 36 percent, to 1,253.
Florida scrutinizes drug-related deaths more closely than do other states, and so there is little basis for comparison with them.
It has also witnessed several highly publicized cases in recent years that have highlighted the problem. Only last year, an accidental prescription drug overdose killed Anna Nicole Smith in Broward County.
Still, the state has lagged in enforcement. Thirty-eight other states have approved prescription drug monitoring programs that track sales. Florida lawmakers have repeatedly considered similar legislation, but privacy concerns have kept it from passing.
As a result, federal, state and local law enforcement officials say, Florida has become a source of prescription drugs that are illegally sold across the country.
“The monitoring plan is our priority effort, but that is not enough,” William H. Janes, the Florida director of drug control, said in a statement accompanying the study. He said Florida was also looking at ways to curb illegal Internet sales and to encourage doctors and pharmacists to identify potential abusers.
Some local police departments have taken a more novel approach.
In Broward County on May 31, deputies completed a “drug takeback” in which $5 Wal-Mart, CVS or Walgreens gift cards were distributed to 150 people who cleaned out their medicine cabinets and turned in unused drugs in an effort to keep them out of young people’s hands.
“The abuse has reached epidemic proportions,” said Lisa McElhaney, a sergeant in the pharmaceutical drug diversion unit of the Broward County Sheriff’s Office. “It’s just explosive.”
New Hope for People Addicted to Opioids Jul 08, 2008
Public Opinion Online — How does a doctor wean a patient from a legally prescribed painkiller that has brought on an addiction?
Doctors are trying to answer that question through a new type of addictive substance.
Opioid dependency — addiction to a substance that contains opium — is a big problem that’s prevalent even in rural communities such as Franklin County.
Opium, an addictive narcotic drug that comes from the dried juice of a poppy, is an ingredient in many prescription-strength pain relievers, such as OxyContin, Percocet and Tylenol with codeine, as well as heroin and methadone. This group of drugs is called opioids.
Specially trained physicians, including Dr. Bridget Hilliard of Antrim Family Practice in Greencastle, are having success in treating opioid-dependent people with a partial-opioid medication called Suboxone.
One of Hilliard’s patients, a Franklin County woman in her early 20s who was addicted to heroin, tried several times to get off the drug herself.
She went to a methadone clinic for a year, but then found it more difficult to quit methadone than heroin. While on methadone she felt tired and in a haze all the time, falling asleep during college classes. She had to go to a clinic six days a week to get her daily supply of methadone, which cost $12 a day. She felt so ill on the drug that she returned to heroin.
Now that she’s taking a drug called Suboxone, she feels well, is back at college and working. She expects to be weaned off Suboxone within six months and has lost the desire to take opioids, she said.
"The Suboxone has been a miracle," she said.
In her class at Greencastle-Antrim High School, the patient said that at least half the students had taken some sort of opioid for recreation at least once and about 10 percent of the students at the time of graduation were addicted to one of those drugs.
Research shows that unlike methadone, which is a full opioid and extremely addictive, Suboxone changes the brain chemistry on a long-term basis, Hilliard said. This gives addicts a better chance of staying off illegal opioids after stopping their use of Suboxone.
Hilliard has been prescribing Suboxone since last fall, and strongly encourages her patients to have drug counseling while taking it.
In order to prescribe Suboxone, doctors must acquire a Drug Enforcement Agency license. They do this by getting additional training about the chemical. Even after becoming licensed, a doctor is limited in the number of patients he or she can treat at a time, Hilliard said.
How people become opioid dependent
For half of those addicted, Hilliard said, the addiction started when they were prescribed a painkiller, such as Percocet, Vicodin, OxyContin or Tylenol with codeine. The other half initially started using the painkillers in their teen years to get a euphoric feeling.
She has talked to people who took an opioid for the first time for a migraine and got such a euphoric feeling they continued taking it because it made them feel good.
"Your body can build up a tolerance for the medication, so you need to take more to get the same effects," Hilliard said, adding extremely high levels can cause breathing problems as well as the other problems that accompany addiction. "People of any age can get addicted."
Some people can use these medications appropriately and not get addicted, but there’s no way of knowing who they are, Hilliard said, adding that doctors need to monitor their patients’ use of the drugs. Doctors also must be very detailed when charting why they are prescribing the medications, how much is being prescribed and if the patient is showing signs of psychological dependence, she said.
Those who have a history of substance abuse are more prone to becoming addicted to another substance, Hilliard said.
It isn’t foolproof, but Suboxone may be the best chance some people have.
Implants Show Promise for Heroin Users Jul 08, 2008
ABC NEWS — A study at the University of Western Australia has found that heroin addicts with naltrexone implants are far less likely to return to heroin use than those taking oral tablets.
But critics are sceptical about the study and say that naltrexone is still a risky option for drug users trying to kick the habit.
Naltrexone is a drug which blocks the effects of heroin on the brain. It is usually taken as a tablet, but if heroin users stop taking the pill they often fall back into drug use.
That is why scientists have been working on an implant which automatically releases naltrexone into the body.
Gary Hulse from the University Of Western Australia is confident about the naltrexone’s success.
"It means that you’ve got a a one-stop shop. People can come in, they receive their treatment or implant and for five months or six months, they carry that treatment with them," he said.
The six-month trial involved 69 heroin users. Fifty-four completed the trial. Of the 28 participants who received a naltrexone tablet, 15 returned to regular heroin use. Of the 26 people who received a naltrexone implant, just two returned to heroin use.
Researchers like Mr Hulse say it is a good result for naltrexone implants.
"This is a relatively safe and a treatment which has good clinical outcomes," he said.
The study is yet to be published in a peer-reviewed medical journal, but the team at the University of Western Australia are confident the research will be well received.
"I’m not only confident that it’ll be published in a peer review but I would be surprised if this wasn’t accepted by one of the extremely high rating journals," said Mr Hulse.
But critics like Dr Alex Wodak, from the Alcohol And Drug Services at Vincents Hospital in Sydney, have little time for the new study.
"The paper hasn’t been published yet in a scientific journal and so therefore, it’s the equivalent of hearsay in a court of law. That is, it’s not really evidence," he said.
Naltrexone is a controversial drug. The implants are yet to be approved by Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) and there have been mixed results for heroin users.
Some patients have stopped using heroin after receiving an implant. But others have cut them out of their body or suffered serious side effects.
"The implants, I know for a fact, were at one stage required by the therapeutic goods administration to be stamped, not for use in human subjects, and the authors have conceded that to me in writing," said Dr Wodak.
But researchers such as Moira Sim from the Naltrexone Trial Independent Monitoring Committee say the implants used in the Perth trial were approved by the TGA.
"The committee reviewed all the processes that the trial went through and we are confident that they followed the correct processes that the data was collected properly, and therefore I’m very confident in the results of the trial," she said.
The researchers say the next step will be to conduct a trial comparing naltrexone implants with methadone and other drugs used to control heroin addiction.
PARIS (AFP) — The drug buprenorphine is twice as effective as a rival treatment called naltrexone in helping heroin patients stay off the narcotic, a trial published in The Lancet on Friday said.
The two drugs, along with a dummy pill called a placebo, were tested for 22 months among 126 patients in Malaysia who had emerged from a detoxification and counselling programme, it said.
Buprenorphine, which is marketed as Temgesic or Buprenex, was twice as effective as naltrexone (branded as Revia, Depade or Vivitrol) and the placebo in terms of days of abstinence from heroin and a full-fledged relapse to the narcotic.
Indeed, buprenorphine proved to be so superior that the trial was halted early, as it would have been unethical to continue it to its scheduled end.
The study, led by Yale University’s Richard Schottenfeld, gives support for placing buprenorphine alongside methadone, and both of them over naltrexone, as pharmacological treatments for helping addicts stay off heroin.
The three drugs belong to a class called opioid antagonists.
These treatments are increasingly used to help ease heroin dependence but remain prohibited in some countries, amid suspicions that they are liable to be abused or simply substitute one addiction for another.
The study is important because it gives the first assessment of the relative effectiveness of two of the opioid antagonists.
Heroin and other illicit opiates were once a problem mainly confined to developed countries, but in the past few decades have spread to developing economies and nations of the former Soviet bloc.
China, India, Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia, Pakistan and Russia are among the countries where expansion of heroin use has risen fastest, according to a 2004 World Health Organisation (WHO) paper.
Drug Addiction an Illness, Not a Crime Jul 08, 2008
Times Union — Tatum O’Neal, the Oscar-winning actress, took a plea deal last week stemming from her June 1 arrest while supposedly trying to score some crack cocaine on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. She was initially charged with possession of a controlled substance and faced a year in prison if convicted. The court allowed her to plead out to a disorderly conduct charge and ordered her to attend two half-day drug treatment sessions. If she follows the court’s orders, the cocaine possession charges will be dismissed.
O’Neal has been open about her history of heroin addiction as outlined in her memoir, "A Paper Life." When she was arrested by undercover officers, they searched her and found two bags of cocaine along with an unused crack pipe. She had initially told police she was doing research for an acting role. Then she changed her story and told them that the death of her 16-year-old dog nearly triggered her into relapse.
Some say O’Neal was treated with a slap on the wrist. Others say she did not deserve to do any jail time because of her addiction. This raises a critical question that we as a society need to address. Should we treat drug addiction as a criminal matter, or as a medical problem?
For most people, treatment is a much more effective approach than imprisonment for successfully breaking their addictions, yet our prisons are full of individuals whose only crime is their drug addiction.
According to Justice Department statistics, the United States has more prisoners than any country in the world, 2.5 million and rising. In 2006, the Justice Department recorded the largest increase since 2000 in the number of people in prisons and jails. Criminal justice experts attribute the exploding prison population to harsh sentencing laws and record numbers of drug law violators entering the system, many of whom have substance abuse problems.
Nonviolent drug offenders like Tatum O’Neal should be given an opportunity to receive treatment, not jail time, for their drug use. This would be a more effective (not to mention much more affordable) solution for both the individual and the community. Prosecutors in many states, most notably New York, have leeway to recommend a defendant to treatment instead of incarceration. More than likely, however, they will not do it. This is because it would not be considered a victory for them. The system does not reward prosecutors for doing the compassionate thing.
O’Neal can be an example for millions of young people. One can only hope that her experiences with addiction and the realities of the drug war will encourage her to join the movement to reform U.S. drug policy. If she decides to take up the cause of treatment, she could help change laws across the country. After all, if treatment instead of jail is good enough for her as she struggles with her addiction, surely it is good enough for the thousands of others just like her who struggle with their own substance abuse problems.
Like depression, addiction affects tens of millions of Americans. How best to treat it is a serious a question we need to explore. Rich or poor, young or old, addiction has no boundaries. But the drug war does. Our long war on drugs has stifled the open debate society should be having about the nature of addiction and how best to deal with it. It is time to treat addiction for what it is — a medical problem, not a criminal one.
The skyrocketing use and abuse of prescription narcotics in Las Vegas is accompanied by a similarly startling increase in the number of fatal overdoses, a Sun analysis has found.
Fatal overdoses involving prescription painkillers more than quadrupled in a decade and now exceed those involving illicit drugs, according to data compiled by the Clark County coroner’s office.
The trend reflects the extraordinarily high use of narcotic painkillers by Nevadans. The Sun reported Sunday that its analysis of Drug Enforcement Administration data shows that Nevadans per person use more hydrocodone — the potent ingredient in the drugs Vicodin, Lortab and Norco — than residents of any other state. Nevadans rank fourth nationally in per person consumption of methadone, morphine and oxycodone, the main ingredient in OxyContin.
The increased use and availability of the drugs are primary factors in the rise of addiction, illegal distribution and fatal overdoses, experts say.
In 1997, there were 57 fatal overdoses in Clark County in which prescription narcotics were a contributing factor, a rate of about five per 100,000 people. In 2007, 258 people died in Clark County from overdoses of prescription narcotics, a rate of 13 per 100,000 people.
In contrast, the number of deaths caused by illicit drugs has plateaued. Street drugs such as cocaine, methamphetamine and heroin were involved in a combined 197 fatal overdoses in 2007.
Deaths involving prescription narcotics exceeded or rivaled those caused by firearms (321) and motor vehicle accidents (234) in Clark County in 2007.
Clark County Coroner Mike Murphy called the prescription drug deaths a “dire situation.”
Doctors who specialize in pain management, and pharmaceutical companies that make the drugs, emphasize that many people are helped by prescription narcotics while acknowledging that a small percentage may become addicted.
Prescription drug overdoses draw national attention when the victims include such celebrities as Heath Ledger and Anna Nicole Smith, but aside from the sensational anecdotes, little is reported about the overall toll of overdoses.
Poisoning, usually caused by unintentional drug overdose, is the second leading cause of injury death in the United States, surpassing firearms in 2004, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.
Prescription narcotics deaths accounted for 56 percent of poisoning deaths nationally in 2005, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and their absolute number increased by 84 percent from 1999 to 2005.
Some regional data compiled by medical examiners further illustrate the problem:
• In King County, Washington (Seattle), prescription opiates killed 148 people in 2006, a 572 percent increase since 1997.
• In Virginia, prescription narcotics took 399 lives in 2006, compared with 146 deaths from cocaine and amphetamines.
• In Oklahoma, of 603 drug-related deaths in 2006, more than half, 327, were attributed to hydrocodone, methadone or oxycodone.
• In Florida, people who died of drug overdoses in 2007 had prescription drugs in their systems more often than illicit drugs.
No prescribed narcotic is involved in more deaths among Nevadans than methadone. The long-acting painkiller was named in a third of the 1,771 prescription drug overdoses in Clark County from 1991 to 2007, according to the Clark County coroner’s office. The number of deaths involving methadone climbed from three in 1993 to 20 in 1998 and 105 in 2007. (Cocaine was a factor in 116 Clark County deaths in 2007.)
Methadone, widely used to wean addicts off other drugs, has grown in popularity as a painkiller in recent years. Several doctors said it’s preferred by insurance companies because it’s inexpensive — though insurers dispute this, saying there are many low-cost generic narcotics so there would be no reason to favor methadone.
But methadone is a challenging drug to prescribe because it stays in a person’s system for five to 11 days, even after its effects have worn off, said Las Vegas pain specialist Dr. Jim Marx. That means a patient could take multiple doses of methadone over time to keep pain in check, allowing potentially lethal amounts of the drug to build up in the body. In comparison, hydrocodone leaves the body within hours.
“It’s trickier to prescribe because of its persistence,” Marx said.
Methadone deaths have increased more than those involving any other narcotic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports.
Its data show Nevada had almost four methadone deaths per 100,000 people from 1999 to 2005, the fourth-highest rate in the United States, behind Maine, Utah and Washington.
The CDC said it’s hard to determine whether the increase in opioid-related deaths is due to prescribing practices, a failure by patients to take drugs properly, or illegal abuse.
CDC medical epidemiologist Leonard Paulozzi told Congress in March the drug overdose deaths correspond to the rapidly rising rates of prescription narcotic use reported by the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the overdose deaths are expected to continue.
Statistics through 2005 “probably underestimate the present magnitude of the problem,” Paulozzi said.
•••
There are many ways to get prescription narcotics illegally, said Matt Alberto, deputy chief of investigations for the Nevada Public Safety Department, the state’s lead prescription drug policing agency.
Unscrupulous doctors sell prescriptions for cash. Abusers shop for doctors who prescribe narcotic painkillers without asking many questions. Children fish around in their parents’ medicine cabinets. Patients forge prescriptions. Pharmacy workers, clinic workers and hospital employees steal the drugs.
The most notorious criminal case of a doctor in Las Vegas illegally providing narcotic drugs involves Dr. Harriston Bass Jr., who, according to evidence at his trial, made house calls to prescribe and distribute prescription narcotics.
Bass drove to patients’ homes, conducted 10-minute exams and then sold the patients two or three bottles of 100 pills each — even though he had no license to distribute controlled substances, according to testimony at his trial. He also wrote prescriptions for patients to fill at pharmacies.
Among his patients was Gina Micali, who received about 300 hydrocodone tablets from Bass every other month, plus a prescription for another 180 and one refill. On each visit she also received the muscle relaxant Soma and the anxiety medication Xanax, plus prescriptions for each. In pills and prescriptions, Bass sold Micali a total of about 1,400 pills per visit, said Conrad Hafen, the chief deputy attorney general, who prosecuted the case.
On Oct. 5, 2005, Micali, 38, died after ingesting too many painkillers she got from Bass.
Hafen told the jury that when police searched Bass’ home, they found $150,000 in cash and large quantities of hydrocodone in bottles labeled with the name of his company — DOCS-24-7 — and a wholesale prescription drug company in Illinois.
Alberto said the Illinois company offered no good explanation for why it was selling drugs to a doctor who didn’t have clearance from the Drug Enforcement Administration.
In March, Bass was convicted of second-degree murder in Micali’s death and was found guilty on more than 50 drug-related charges. He was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.
A more typical case of illegally diverting prescription painkillers involves Stephanie Ortiz, a former pharmacy technician at four Smith’s grocery stores in Las Vegas. She admitted to the pharmacy board that she gave unauthorized refills of Lortab — a painkiller made with hydrocodone — and free drugs to friends posing as patients. Ortiz filled out refill requests but never faxed or phoned them to physicians for approval, the complaint against her says. She admitted illegally diverting 10,680 doses of the painkiller.
In a letter she wrote admitting her guilt, Ortiz says she started giving the purloined drugs to people she knew, and then got text messages and phone calls saying a random person would come by for another pickup. In exchange for the drugs, Ortiz said, she received VIP tables at nightclubs and access to hotel rooms on busy weekends.
Authorities say young people are cavalier with prescription drugs, sharing them among themselves or sneaking them from their parents and passing them around to their friends. Such a transaction ended in death two years ago this week in Mesquite.
According to an affidavit filed by the Nevada Public Safety Department, Brett Sawyer, 19, was found dead in his bedroom on July 8, 2006. Hidden in a gym bag by his bed was an empty bottle of hydrocodone pills prescribed by a dentist in St. George, Utah, to one of his friends.
Sawyer’s family told investigators he was a drug user. “Brett was the type — if one aspirin worked, three would work better,” his mother said.
Police learned that Sawyer was addicted to OxyContin and often obtained drugs from Cody Morris, who was also an addict and dealt the drugs to his friends.
On July 7, 2006, Morris sold Sawyer three 80 mg OxyContin pills — what some call the Cadillac of prescription narcotics — for $45 each. Morris said he warned Sawyer not to take more than one at a time and to avoid mixing them with alcohol.
Sawyer was dead the next day.
Morris pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to three years’ probation.
Alberto, the investigator, said it’s as common for drug dealers to sell prescription narcotics as it is methamphetamine or cocaine — and more profitable. An ounce of methamphetamine might sell wholesale in Las Vegas for $700, he said, but the same weight in OxyContin pills would be $3,000. He guessed the illegal abuse of prescription painkillers could account for 10 percent of the state’s total use.
Alberto laments that policymakers and the public are focused on street drugs, and virtually ignore the dangers in people’s medicine cabinets. Narcotics investigators for Metro Police do not investigate prescription drug dealing and deal with the drugs only on a reactive basis, a spokesman said.
Yet prescription narcotics are becoming more popular than marijuana for new abusers. The 2006 National Survey on Drug Use and Health found that among new drug abusers, 2.2 million people chose prescription painkillers and 2.1 million preferred marijuana.
Nothing stimulates the brain with pleasure more than drugs. But doctors disagree about the threat of drug addiction. People at risk of becoming addicted to them range from 3 percent to 18 percent of the population, depending on the study or the expert.
Prescription narcotics can change the brain’s chemistry, creating a physical and psychological dependence that compels addicts to forgo career, children, money, sleep, sex and all-around well-being in pursuit of the drug of choice.
Officials with the Nevada Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Agency say the rise in prescription narcotic addiction in the state cannot be quantified because of the way records are kept. Nationally, a 2006 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration survey showed that an estimated 5.2 million people 12 and older took narcotic painkillers for nonmedical purposes 30 days before the survey, up from about 4.4 million in 2002.
People seem to think that because the drugs are commercially manufactured and approved by the Food and Drug Administration, their abuse is less risky than that of illicit drugs, said Steve Pasierb, president of the Partnership for a Drug-Free America.
“This is a deadly behavior,” Pasierb said of the drug abuse. “When prescription drugs are abused in the same way as illegal street drugs, they’re every bit as addictive and they’re every bit as deadly.”