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antiquity
11-26-2002, 08:33 AM
Web posted Monday, November 25, 2002

The New problem drugs: OxyContin
A prescription drug available over the Internet has become the new heroin

By Riley Woodford
The Juneau Empire


In the six years since it hit the market, OxyContin has gone from being a godsend for terminal cancer patients to a severely abused street drug.

"OxyContin is definitely an issue here in Juneau," said Dr. Lindy Jones, a local family practitioner. "OxyContin was heavily marketed by the drug company for chronic pain, and all over the country people were finding it has significant abuse potential."

When OxyContin hit the market six years ago, legal sales totaled $40 million the first year. In 2000, sales topped $1 billion.

Nationally, a black market for OxyContin is fed in part by crime rings that divert drugs back to the United States from legitimate markets overseas.

In Juneau, the drug sometimes comes to town in a quasi-legal fashion. The pills are sold through the mail by Internet pharmacies. One Web site offers 30 pills of OxyContin for $400 without any reference to a prescription.

After a Juneau man was indicted on drug charges this month, a police sergeant testified the man had purchased nearly 6,000 tablets of painkillers, including OxyContin and related drugs. Police suspect the drugs came through the mail.

"It's remarkable what people can get through the Internet," said drug counselor Larry Olson of the Juneau Recovery Hospital. Olson is seeing a dramatic increase in the number of patients in need of treatment for OxyContin abuse.

Drugs also get in the hands of abusers through legitimate channels.

Drug seekers will make doctor's appointments and claim convincing but bogus symptoms. The Bartlett Regional Hospital emergency room sees its share of drug seekers.

"It's a dilemma we face," said emergency room physician Ken Brown. "We want to give pain control to people with a legitimate need for it and we don't want to give unnecessary medicine. We struggle with that all the time here in ER. There are definitely some people we put a stop to."

Drug counselor Matt Felix thinks doctors tend to be too generous with prescription medication.

"A lot of the drugs on the street are over-prescribing from doctors and dentists," he said. "You get a tooth pulled and they give you a whole damn bottle when you just need a few days' worth."

Dr. Jones disagrees.

"I don't see over-prescribing," he said. "We're under-prescribing, I think."
He said painkillers such as Percocet are best prescribed for short-term pain. Like related painkillers Percodan and Vicodin, these pills contain about five milligrams of the pain reliever oxycodone, mixed with aspirin or acetaminophen. OxyContin is pure oxycodone, in doses two to 15 times stronger.

Jones said physicians are selective about who gets a powerful, addictive narcotic such as OxyContin.

"If you are going to prescribe it you need to do it with patients who are appropriate, with no abuse history, and who are willing to sign a contract," he said.

A pain contract states the patient will obtain prescriptions from one doctor and set up appointments to monitor the patient's condition before the medication runs out. This helps physicians monitor use and determine if drugs are being abused.

Physicians and pharmacists communicate to keep tabs on drug seekers and are successful at identifying misuse of prescriptions.

But there are some physicians who are less vigilant with painkillers such as OxyContin, said Sgt. Tim Birt of the Southeast Alaska Narcotics Enforcement Team.

"We like to think that all doctors are completely ethical, but it's not always the case," he said. "Doctors can be loose with prescriptions, and people will shop around with doctors and move around the community."

Drug seekers will use aliases, or claim prescriptions are lost or stolen in order to refill them multiple times. Even given a vigilant medical community, Birt said a drug seeker potentially could work a number of angles before being identified.

Riley Woodford can be reached at rileyw@juneauempire.com.


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OxyContin at a glance

What is it: OxyContin is a brand name for the painkiller oxycodone hydrochloride.

Who makes it: Purdue Pharma of Norwalk, Conn.

How it is taken: It is a time-release tablet ingested orally.

How long it lasts: OxyContin acts for 12 hours, making it the longest-acting pain reliever on the market. Related painkillers Percocet, Percodan and Vicodin, containing a fraction of the same synthetic opiate, oxycodone, act for three or four hours.

Use: The drug is very good for terminal or severe pain, said Dr. Lindy Jones, providing improved quality of life and improved functioning.

Abuse: The time-release coating allows the drug to enter the system slowly. Abusers may simply take the pills, but most lick off or wash the time-release coating and crush the tablets. Then they snort the powder or cook it and inject it for an immediate, heroin-like high.

http://juneauempire.com/stories/112502/loc_oxy.shtml

alan
11-26-2002, 07:40 PM
Because this country contains some idiots who misuse drugs, legitimate pain patients get screwed.

Seems plenty of idiots get elected to office (party affiliaition immaterial), too, where they get to screw everyone.

The War on Drugs is a colossal waste of time and money.

whiterabbit11
11-27-2002, 10:05 PM
Alan,
I just read this article and your opinion and agree with you all the way. Drug counselor Felix must be on another planet. I've never had a Dr.who over-did it with pain meds and I've had lots of doctors. Most underprescribe leaving pain untreated and make patients feel like a criminal when patients just want some relief. The criminals don't bother seeing a doctor and prescription frauds and forgeries are extremely rare.WR

alan
11-28-2002, 07:41 PM
Pain doctors tend to be careful - they don't want to be treated as criminals. Aree there a few who are? Of course - that's true of any profession. But you don't hassle the law-abiding doctors or patients because of them.

So oxycontin is currentlty in vogue among some druggies. Valium used to be. In a few years, something else will be. That's life - some people want to get high. That's been the case since man started walking on two legs and found plants that made him see funny colors after he ate them. Humanity managed to thrive, anyway.

hoops
12-05-2002, 10:18 AM
I noticed someone said oxycontin is the longest lasting pain killer on the market. Actually, there is one better and longer lasting.

I take Kadian. It is a 24 hour release capsule. Morphine? I think.

Oxycontin never lasted 12 hours for me, I was luckey if it lasted 8 hours, so was taking it 3 times a day. If I was a little late taking it, I got extremely ill with withdrawel type symptoms.

With Kadian, I take 60 mgs AM and 60 mgs PM, (just in case) so I never need to worry about withdrawel. I am able to function much better on Kadian.

Peace & Blessings.
hoops

Laugh and the world laughs with you...
Cry and you have to blow your nose.

alan
12-05-2002, 07:48 PM
Yes, Kadian is morphine.