News (Media Awareness Project) - US WV: W Va Official: Federal Data On Painkiller Addiction Not Accurate |
Title: | US WV: W Va Official: Federal Data On Painkiller Addiction Not Accurate |
Published On: | 2004-08-02 |
Source: | Bluefield Daily Telegraph (WV) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 03:38:25 |
W.VA. OFFICIAL: FEDERAL DATA ON PAINKILLER ADDICTION NOT ACCURATE
CHARLESTON - State officials say data in a federal report showing
only 34 painkiller addicts being treated in West Virginia are not accurate.
The report released by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration listed the 34 addicts under the "other opiates"
category - which excludes OxyContin, Vicodin and Lortab - for 2002.
But vague reporting requirements led 81 percent of West Virginia
addicts in treatment centers to be undefined.
It's not possible to determine how many of those 5,315 people should
have shown up in the pain pill statistics, said Merritt Moore, the
state's drug treatment coordinator.
"We certainly have more than 34," he said.
West Virginia's numbers exclude thousands of prescription drug addicts
enrolled in private methadone clinics, Moore said. The state will
begin regulating those clinics next year.
According to 2003 numbers kept by Moore's office, combined with
estimates the methadone industry submitted to lawmakers, West
Virginia's concentration of painkiller addicts in treatment would be
about 20 percent higher than in Maine, which had the heaviest
concentration of treated narcotic painkiller abusers in the federal
report.
A private company has been hired to keep track of which drugs are
responsible for what treatment, Moore said.
CHARLESTON - State officials say data in a federal report showing
only 34 painkiller addicts being treated in West Virginia are not accurate.
The report released by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration listed the 34 addicts under the "other opiates"
category - which excludes OxyContin, Vicodin and Lortab - for 2002.
But vague reporting requirements led 81 percent of West Virginia
addicts in treatment centers to be undefined.
It's not possible to determine how many of those 5,315 people should
have shown up in the pain pill statistics, said Merritt Moore, the
state's drug treatment coordinator.
"We certainly have more than 34," he said.
West Virginia's numbers exclude thousands of prescription drug addicts
enrolled in private methadone clinics, Moore said. The state will
begin regulating those clinics next year.
According to 2003 numbers kept by Moore's office, combined with
estimates the methadone industry submitted to lawmakers, West
Virginia's concentration of painkiller addicts in treatment would be
about 20 percent higher than in Maine, which had the heaviest
concentration of treated narcotic painkiller abusers in the federal
report.
A private company has been hired to keep track of which drugs are
responsible for what treatment, Moore said.
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