Posts Tagged ‘Drugs’

Pharmageddon: how America got hooked on killer prescription drugs

[MY REFLECTION AT THE BOTTOM OF THE ARTICLE]

ARTICLE ORIGINALLY POSTED HERE –> Pharmageddon: how America got hooked on killer prescription drugs

White House declares prescription drug abuse in US ‘alarming’ as thousands flock to Florida – the home of oxycodone pill mills

The Kentucky number plate on Chad’s pick-up truck, parked round the back of a doctor’s clinic in Palm Beach, Florida, reveals that he has just driven a thousand miles, 16 hours overnight, to be here – and he’s not come for the surfing.

“It’s my back,” he says, rubbing his lower vertebrae. “I’m a builder. I fell off the roof and hurt my back.”

That’s odd, as we have just watched him run out of the clinic and over to his truck without so much as a limp. He’s clutching a prescription for 180 30mg doses of the painkiller oxycodone.

Chad is one of thousands of “pillbillies” who descend on Florida every year from across the south and east coasts of America. Some come in trucks bearing telltale number plates from Kentucky, Georgia, Tennessee, even far-away Ohio. Others come by the busload on the apocryphally named Oxycodone Express.

It’s a lucrative trade. Chad tells us he has just paid $275 (£168) to the doctor inside the clinic, or pill mill, as it is pejoratively called. The doctor, who can see up to 100 people in a sitting, can make more than $25,000 in a day, cash in hand.

For Chad the profits are handsome too. He will spend $720 at a pharmacy on his 180 pills, giving him a total outlay of about $1,000. Back in Kentucky he can sell each pill for $30, giving them a street value of $5,400 and Chad a clear profit of more than $4,000. If he goes to 10 pill mills in Palm Beach on this one trip he could multiply that windfall tenfold. But then there’s the other cost of the oxycodone trade, a cost that is less often talked about, certainly not by Chad or his accommodating doctor.

Every day in Florida seven people die having overdosed on prescriptiondrugs – 2,531 died in 2009 alone. That statistic is replicated across the US, where almost 30,000 people died last year from abusing pharmaceutical pills.

It’s an American catastrophe that has been dubbed pharmageddon, though it rarely pierces the public consciousness. Occasionally a celebrity overdose will attract attention – Anna Nicole Smith, Heath Ledger, Michael Jackson – but they are specks in a growing mountain of human mortality.

The White House last month said the abuse of prescription drugs had become the US’s fastest-growing drug problem.

Declaring the trend an “alarming public health crisis”, it pointed out that people were dying unintentionally from painkiller overdoses at rates that exceeded the crack cocaine epidemic of the 1980s and the black tar heroin epidemic of the 1970s combined.

At the heart of the disaster is the powerfully addictive painkiller oxycodone, which comes in various brands – OxyContin, Roxicodone and Percocet. It is a legitimate therapy for those in great pain but has spawned a generation of addicts and, in turn, attracted crooked doctors who massively expanded the prescription of the drugs in up to 200 pill mills, most in southern Florida.

The epidemic has affected people of all ages but is becoming more prominent among teenagers and young adults.

Ric Bradsaw, the sheriff in Palm Beach, said: “There’s a culture that’s taking hold among teenagers that because a doctor prescribes these pills they can’t be bad. Kids don’t have the fear of pharmaceuticals that they do of illegal drugs.”

Eleanor Hernandez was introduced to “oxies” when she was 14. “I had no idea it was dangerous at all. Other people were taking it for pain, so why would I worry about it?”

Her mother had just died and Hernandez found that she felt care-free when she took a pill. “It took the pain away, of my mother’s death, and physically too. It numbed you, made you feel like you were in a bubble.”

By 15 Hernandez was selling oxycodone from the park across the street, making money to pay for her own habit. It was a downward spiral. She was in and out of rehabilitation clinics, in and out of custody. Then she overdosed twice and was resuscitated both times in hospital.

But Hernandez was one of the lucky ones. Now 20, she works in a treatment centre helping 14 to 17-year-olds beat addiction. “To this day I thank God that I found help because if I hadn’t I probably wouldn’t be here.”

Rich Perry did not find help. He died aged 21 from a cocktail of oxycodone and other prescription and illegal drugs. He began taking prescription pills three years previously, in his last year at high school. He confided in his mother, Karen, that he had a drug problem and went into rehab.

He was clean for a year, but then, without his parents realising, he relapsed, obtaining oxycodone from three separate doctors. He overdosed once but carried on using the drug. The first Karen knew that her son had gone back to the pills was when two officers knocked at her door at 2am to tell her he was dead.

Now, like Hernandez, Perry seeks solace by helping others to avoid her son’s fate. She runs the Florida group Narcotics Overdose Prevention and Education – Nope. Together with the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians it is battling to persuade the state to introduce a monitoring database that would allow police and medical authorities to identify where the oxycodone is coming from, and in turn identify and shut down the pill mills. Though Florida is the epicentre of the oxycodone epidemic, with 98% of all the nation’s doctors who handle the drug located here, astonishingly the state has no comprehensive database recording prescription histories.

Even more astonishingly its recently elected governor, the Tea Party favourite Rick Scott, has blocked the introduction of a database on grounds of cost.

That makes Perry see red. “Cost! For heaven’s sake! What is the cost of a human life?”

The police are even more baffled. They point out that Florida’s lack of regulation has allowed the pill mills to flourish.

Eric Coleman, a narcotics detective in Palm Beach, said the true cost of Florida’s oxycodone disaster would surpass that of the database many times over if all costs related to the crisis – state subsidies for prescriptions, policing and incarceration of addicts, hospital visits for those who overdose, autopsies and paupers’ burials for the dead – were added up.

The Palm Beach police force has many of the pill mills under surveillance and is steadily shutting them down. Over the past year 33 healthcare professionals have been arrested in Palm Beach alone and several have had their medical licences revoked.

Yet the police know that until a proper monitoring system is in place, the clampdown they are carrying out will only displace the problem. Pill mills are popping up in other parts of Florida, around Tampa and Orlando, as pill mill doctors move to new pastures.

“This crisis is going to get worse before it gets better,” Coleman says. “It’s heartbreaking to watch all the families ripped apart, the young lives ended, the damage these doctors – that honourable, esteemed profession that we trust to look after us – are leaving behind.”

 

[I CANNOT BELIEVE WE LIVE IN A COUNTRY WHERE WE SPEND BILLIONS OF DOLLARS ON FIGHTING A WAR ON DRUGS ONLY TO HELP MAJOR PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES PROFIT BY SELLING “LEGAL” DRUGS THAT ARE JUST AS DAMAGING TO SOCIETY AND THE ADDICTS WHO USE THEM.  WHEN WILL WE STOP THE CORRUPTION IN MEDICAL CARE?  HOW CAN WE TURN A BLIND EYE TO THE MEGA PROFITS PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES ARE MAKING FROM SELLING “PRESCRIPTION” DRUGS TO PEOPLE ONLY TO TRY AND GET THEM ADDICTED TO FURTHER DRIVE PROFITS AND INCREASE THE BOTTOM LINE.  LETS PUT THESE COMPANIES IN THE SAME SECTION OF SOCIETY THEY DESERVE TO BE IN…DRUG DEALERS.  I SEE KNOW DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A DOCTOR WHO OVER PRESCRIBES, OXY-COTTON, ANTI DEPRESSANTS, OR ATTENTION DEFICIT DISORDER, DRUGS TO MAKE A PROFIT, FROM A HEROIN DEALERS STANDING OUTSIDE A GAS STATION IN THE GHETTO. ONE JUST PAID A BUNCH OF MONEY FOR THE LICENSES TO SELL DRUGS WHILE THE OTHER JUST DOES IT ILLEGALLY. EITHER WAY BOTH ARE JUST AS HARMFUL TO SOCIETY AND ARE DRIVEN BY ONE THING ONLY…MONEY$$$$$!]

IT SEEMS LIKE A TON OF PEOPLE IN ST. LOUIS ARE TRYING TO FIND HELP AND YET THE USE OF HEROIN IS STILL RISING.  RECENTLY THE CITY HAS SEARCHED FOR AND FOUND A BIGGER VENUE FOR THEIR PUBLIC FORUMS. IF THE TREND CONTINUES THESE EVENTS WILL ONLY GET BIGGER.  I PERSONAL HAVE LOST A FEW FRIENDS/ACQUAINTANCES FROM MY PAST TAKEN BY THIS HORRIBLE ADICTION ALREADY.

PLEASE IF YOU ARE ADDICTED TO HEROIN SEEK HELP AND THE SUPPORT OF FRIENDS AND FAMILY.

St. Louis County finds bigger venue for heavy turnout at forums on heroin use

Crowds have been so big at two public forums on teen heroin use that organizers had to find a bigger venue to host the third forum, police say.

In addition, organizers are now considering adding a fourth meeting to their schedule.

The forums are intended to educate the public about what police are calling the dangerous epidemic of heroin and painkiller use among teens.

The next meeting will be at at 7 p.m. Aug. 29 at Oakville High School, at 5557 Milburn Road in south St. Louis County.

The purpose of the forum is to give people information about the epidemic of heroin use in an effort to stop it from spreading. The meeting is free and open to parents and students.

The St. Louis County Police Department, the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse and the St. Louis County Children’s Service Fund will have speakers at the event.

This meeting on Aug. 29 will be the third in a series of townhall meetings on the topic of heroin. The first forum was held at Pattonville High School, and about 120 people attended, said St. Louis County Police Officer Rick Eckhard. The second was at Hazelwood Central High School, and the turnout was slightly larger than the first meeting.

Organizers initially had this third forum scheduled elsewhere, but turnout had been so high at the first two forums that they decided to find a new location with more space.

Eckhard said organizers expect more people at the next public meeting, partly because word is spreading about the forums but also because south St. Louis County is one of the areas with the greatest number of deaths associated with heroin.

Law enforcement officials in the St. Louis area say they’ve seen a dangerous epidemic of heroin and prescription painkiller use by teens. In the first four months of this year, 35 people have died from heroin overdoses in St. Louis County, nearly double the rate for 2010.

For additional information please visit the website at http://not-even-once.com/townhall.html

Read more: http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/article_d437cf86-bc5e-11e0-8310-0019bb30f31a.html#ixzz1U01neXBQ

FOR MORE INFORMATION CHECK OUT THE WORLD FACT BOOK SECTION ON HEROIN

HERE –> 1.2 The global heroin market and HERE –>2.2 Opium/heroin