Pain pill abuse serious

By Keith Purtell
Phoenix Staff Writer

July 28, 2008 07:40 pm


Where drug abuse once meant the stereotype of illegal drugs, it now includes abuse of prescription drugs.
Oklahoma was recently ranked worst in the nation for pain reliever abuse by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
The information came from a survey of 136,110 Americans ages 12 and older to track state-by-state substance use and mental health patterns.
Janet Petty, prevention resource coordinator at Bill Willis Community Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, said the most commonly-abused prescriptions are Lortab, OxyContin and Vicodin.
“This is an emerging drug trend. Among 12th graders in Cherokee and Wagoner counties, 20 percent are abusing prescription drugs on a daily basis. The problem is access. Right now, most of them are getting them at home or at a relative’s house.”
Petty said research shows 18.3 percent are getting prescriptions for pain relievers like Lortab from a physician. Only 4.5 buy them from a drug dealer.
“As for why they are using them, the reasons are: as a pain reliever, to sleep, to deal with anxiety, or to get high,” she said. “Teens think they’re safe; that it’s not addictive if they got it from a physician. But adolescents are more likely than young adults to become dependent on these prescriptions.”
Petty said she doesn’t think adults are aware of the severe possibility of overdose. She said young people are so influenced by their peers that if they get a headache they’ll say, “Mom, can I have a Lortab?” because that’s what they’re hearing from friends. Or, they are seeing what adults are using.
She ranks the entire problem as an extremely serious social issue.
“We talk about alcohol, tobacco and marijuana as ‘gateway drugs’ where young people start experimenting,” she said. “Prescription drugs are about to knock marijuana out of that third place as a gateway drug. With alcohol, tobacco and marijuana, we have told young people over and over that it is wrong. But we haven’t really talked to them about prescription drugs. We are a ‘fix it now’ society. We want to just take a pill to make a problem go away.”
As for prevention, Petty said the first and most simple thing to do is take away the access.
“First off, lock up your meds,” she said. “Adults locked up medicines when the children were small. Now they need to do it when they are teens. And adults need to stop giving their prescription drugs to other people. I think physicians need to be educated on the problem of prescription drug overuse. I just think all adults need to be aware of the problem.”
The SAMHSA report providing analyses of substance use and mental health patterns occurring in each state revealed wide variations among the states in problems like illicit drug use and underage drinking, but that no state was immune from these problems. For example, past month use of alcohol among persons aged 12 to 20 ranged from a low of 21.5 percent in Utah to a high of 38.3 percent in Vermont. Yet Utah had the highest level of people age 18 or older reporting serious psychological distress in the past year, while Hawaii had the lowest level. In 2005-06, Oklahoma had the highest percentage of persons aged 12 or older using pain relievers for nonmedical purposes in the past year.
Special District Judge Robin Adair said he sees many defendants linked to drug abuse.
“I can tell you based on my observation that way more than half have had some type of substance abuse problem,” he said. “Out of that group, prescription drug abuse is pretty high. You will find that about 40 percent of those people also have problems with prescription drugs. They are poly-drug users; they use whatever they can get a hold of.”
Adair described prescription drug abuse as a shared problem and a growing problem. He pointed out one way emergency rooms are trying to deal with it; they will just give a patient five or six pills to get them by until their physician writes a regular prescription.
“I’ve seen lots of people intentionally hurt themselves so they can go to the emergency room and get a pain reliever,” he said. “I’ve seen people drop heavy objects on their feet or cut themselves pretty badly, just so they could go to the ER and get a pain reliever. One fellow put his hand in a vise and crushed one of his little fingers. It’s the kind of thing that if you didn’t deal with these people, you wouldn’t believe it. It’s addictive behavior.”
One partial solution is the adult drug court in which Adair presides. It tries to keep substance abusers out of prison by directing them to rehabilitation and other community programs.
“We’ve had a 10-year track record with the adult drug court, and virtually everyone who has come through there has had a problem with prescription drugs,” he said. “However, we’re pretty happy with the adult drug court; it has a success rate of 60 percent. Normally, these people have a 90 percent failure rate.”


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The state of Oklahoma has been recently ranked the worstin the nation for pain reliever abuse by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.