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Old 30-07-2008, 06:02
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Prescription drug addictions rise

By Jason Szep
Quote:

BOSTON (Reuters) - When Sarah Roisman was 11 years old, her doctors prescribed Klonopin, a muscle relaxant, for a psychiatric disorder that caused her to have seizures. She liked how the drug made her feel. Her seizures went away.
But that's where her trouble with addiction began.

By age 14, the teen from an upper middle-class Philadelphia suburb led a dangerous double life. Editor of her school paper, strong student and popular athlete, Roisman was also hooked on painkillers and other drugs in an addiction that illustrates the rapid expansion in prescription drug abuse in America.

"My friends and I would take a bunch of different pills and break them up and put them all together and call it confetti. It could be any combination of anything. We could learn from it, and continue to take it," said Roisman, who is now 17.

The issue of prescription drug abuse shot to prominence with January's death of 28-year-old Hollywood actor Heath Ledger after he took six different prescriptions. The death of Ledger, who plays the Joker in the new Batman film "The Dark Night," adds to a growing list of prescription drug overdoses that includes Playboy model Anna Nicole Smith in 2007.

Other deaths are less celebrated. In the 45-54 age group, overdose deaths fueled by prescription drugs now surpass motor vehicle deaths as the nation's No. 1 cause of accidental death, federal data show.

The federal data also show nearly 7 million Americans abused prescription drugs in 2007 -- more than cocaine, heroin, hallucinogens, Ecstasy and inhalants such as marijuana combined. The figure is up 80 percent since 2000.

Definitions of abuse vary but refer typically to nonmedical use of prescription drugs

The number of Americans treated for abuse of painkillers surged 321 percent from 1995 to 2005, federal statistics show -- a trend some health experts link to another stunning figure: the 180 million prescriptions dispensed legally by U.S. pharmacies each year for pain medication.

In Florida, whose reputation for cocaine and other hard drugs was burnished in movies such as "Scarface" and "Miami Vice," the rate of deaths caused by prescription drugs was three times the rate of death caused by all illicit drugs combined, according to an analysis of 2007 autopsies by the Florida Medical Examiners Commission released in June.

'LOW SOCIAL DISAPPROVAL'

"What you have among over the counter and prescription drug use is a very low perception of risk," said Stephen Pasierb, president and chief executive of the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, a nonprofit advocacy group.

"There's very low social disapproval. In fact, there are parents who almost relieved that their kid is using Vicodin and not smoking marijuana," he said.

Len Paulozzi, an epidemiologist with the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, testified recently in Congress that he believed physicians were improperly trained in the long-term dangers of therapy involving opioid painkillers, or drugs containing opium.

"There are guidelines out there, but we don't think that they're being routinely followed," he said.

Sen. Joseph Biden, a Democrat from Delaware, proposed to make August 2008 "National Medicine Abuse Awareness Month" in a resolution now before the Senate Judiciary Committee, saying the Internet had become "an information superhighway" for abuse of medicine in the United States.

But containing the abuse is notoriously difficult. Thirty-eight states have passed legislation for prescription drug monitoring programs to trace the source of drugs, and police in some states have had success in reducing pharmacy break-ins.

A University of Maine program provides pre-addressed, postage-paid pouches to the elderly so they can mail their surplus prescription drugs to state authorities for disposal in a bid to reduce the amount that get into the wrong hands.

None of the measures has stopped the growth nationwide, and experts point to several stubborn problems, including the phenomenon of "doctor shopping," in which patients go to multiple doctors to get several prescriptions.

Hundreds of online pharmacies also offer drugs that include generic versions of opiates like Purdue Pharma's OxyContin, methadone and Abbott Laboratories Inc's Vicodin, which are legitimately prescribed as painkillers, along with stimulants like Ritalin made by Novartis, and benzodiazepines like Pfizer's Xanax.

It is as easy in the United States to buy opiates or other abusable prescription drugs online as it is to purchase a book, said David Festinger, a scientist who has studied online drug sales at the Treatment Research Institute at the University of Pennsylvania. Regulating such trade is tough, he said.

"These Internet enterprises set up a bank account in one country, buy their drugs from another country, and do their merchandising and sales from another country," he said. "Everything is spread all over the globe. And in an instant, if anybody's on their tail, they can switch everything around."

RAIDING MEDICINE CABINETS

For many children, getting the drugs is simple.

In Philadelphia, Roisman and her friends raided family medicine cabinets for the big prizes -- OxyContin, a kind of synthetic morphine also known as "hillbilly heroin," along with Ritalin and Vicodin -- until she eventually passed out one day in school. A drug test showed she had seven drugs in her system.

"People think that it's OK because it's a prescribed pill. It comes from a credible source. Even if a doctor has not told you it's OK, they've told someone else it's OK," said Roisman, who became sober two years ago after treatment at a rehab center run by the nonprofit Caron organization.

She blames doctors for failing to "watch what they are prescribing" and parents for failing to understand "just how hard people will work to get what they want when they are an addict," adding many teens use the drugs to help study.

On college campuses, popping Adderall, Ritalin and other prescribed amphetamine-like psychostimulant drugs is a popular way to help cram for tests and cope with academic pressure.

Some are legitimately prescribed for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, helping sufferers increase alertness, attention and energy. But many use it without prescriptions.

Almost 60 percent of students have been offered an opportunity to try prescription stimulants by their junior (third) year of college in the United States, said Amelia Arria, a senior researcher at the University of Maryland's Center for Drug Abuse Research, which surveyed 1,253 students on drug usage.

Health insurers are also feeling the effects. Some face mounting pressure to expand coverage to include substance-abuse disorders. Others are grappling with swindlers who obtain illicit prescription narcotics through fraudulent insurance claims for bogus prescriptions, treating phantom injuries.

Such fraud costs health insurers up to $72.5 billion a year, according to a 2008 report by the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud, an advocacy group based in Washington.
Yea it's long but its interesting
Edit: Interesting because it adds to the fear everyone has... of their kid becoming a pill head... IT COULD BE YOUR KID. he could be GETTING HIGH OFF MEDICINE RIGHT NOW,


HE COULD DIE AT ANY SECOND oh wait... 45-54 age group too? YOU COULD GET ADDICTED AND DIE FROM PAIN KILLERS ANY SECOND
perfect storm of fear... fear sells

Last edited by Shiacmkmleer; 30-07-2008 at 17:05.
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Old 30-07-2008, 12:05
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Re: Reuters runs article on rescription drug abuse

This is a very good example of an article that needs the images included. The picture of the casket adds to your point of scaremongering. Please edit your post to add line breaks. I added a prefix to your thread.
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Old 30-07-2008, 12:06
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Re: Prescription drug addictions rise

maybe its just swim but they seem to do these stories every 5 or so years. the drugs they victimize change, but the basic story does not.
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Old 30-07-2008, 20:49
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Re: Prescription drug addictions rise

Since when were strong opiates like oxycontin as easy to order over the internet as a book? Swim has only seen it offered once, and it was outrageously expensive and seemed like a LEA honeypot.
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Old 30-07-2008, 21:54
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Re: Prescription drug addictions rise

SWIM looked into getting Morphine sulphate (MST) online once and found just one website doing them (there were loads offering tramadol and oxy's though). The price was listed as £30 so SWIM sent the company an email enquiring how many tablets she would get for that price - she was shocked when the reply email came through stating that they were £30 each! Thirty pounds for one 30mg morphine tablet when (at the time) SWIM was taking between 15 and 20 of them a night....needless to say she dropped that idea pretty lively.
Anyway how reliable are those online pharmacies anyway? Not very, SWIM thinks: she's heard of people getting sold fake drugs that look like the real deal but contain none of the good stuff. SWIM wouldn't waste her time, energy or money on those websites.

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Old 31-07-2008, 02:05
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Re: Prescription drug addictions rise

Seems every 5 years or so they trot the story of kids pouring Mom & Dads medicine cabinet in a bag and eat whatever they reach when they stick their hand in. My favorite one of these was "Bathroom Roulette (the article's words)" where the kids were supposed to have dumped all the pills on the floor. Turned out the light. And swallowed whatever they touched while crawling around on their hands and knees.

The problem with these tired stories is that people do get scared - especially doctors. This can make it difficult for your average John or Mary to get their needed prescriptions filled. The doctor is afraid they'll find Little Timmy's dead body clutching the Tylenol #3 bottle with his name on it. Other than that it'll create more paranoia in parents - more reasons to distrust their kids. They might get so agitated that they'll take their kid to a doctor and have 'em put on Prozac.
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Old 31-07-2008, 18:10
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Re: Prescription drug addictions rise

Yeah, SWIM read a very similar story (quite some time ago now as well), about the latest 'craze' amongst kids being to have 'drug-cocktail parties', where they would pass a bowl around full up with tablets raided from their parents medicine cabinets (the comparison was that the kids supposedly would all bring a packet of pills to the party rather like adults taking a bottle of wine to a dinner party - lol), close their eyes and stick their hand into the bowl taking whatever it was they pulled out. SWIM has also read similar stories about kids playing 'drinking games' but replacing alcohol with drugs.....it's always the tabloid press and women's magazines that these nonsense scaremongering stories seem to appear in so SWIM just avoids those type of publications like the plague and sticks to reading her favourite broadsheet newspaper only (which happens to be 'The Guardian' in case anyones interested!), that she trusts a lot more. Always a good idea to read everything through sceptical eyes though (in my opinion).
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Old 31-07-2008, 18:18
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Re: Prescription drug addictions rise

Quote:
Originally Posted by beena View Post
Yeah, SWIM read a very similar story (quite some time ago now as well), about the latest 'craze' amongst kids being to have 'drug-cocktail parties', where they would pass a bowl around full up with tablets raided from their parents medicine cabinets (the comparison was that the kids supposedly would all bring a packet of pills to the party rather like adults taking a bottle of wine to a dinner party - lol), close their eyes and stick their hand into the bowl taking whatever it was they pulled out. SWIM has also read similar stories about kids playing 'drinking games' but replacing alcohol with drugs.....it's always the tabloid press and women's magazines that these nonsense scaremongering stories seem to appear in so SWIM just avoids those type of publications like the plague and sticks to reading her favourite broadsheet newspaper only (which happens to be 'The Guardian' in case anyones interested!), that she trusts a lot more. Always a good idea to read everything through sceptical eyes though (in my opinion).
SWIM has heard about the kids putting all the meds in a big bowl and reaching in and taking whatever they get; however, SWIM has been in highschool and college in the past 5 years and hasn't seen anything like that....he has SWIM a lot of people wanting meds like oxy's or adderall and some benzo's....SWIM personally thinks that the media is just ramping up something that maybe happend once
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