News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: PUB LTE: Drug Abuse |
Title: | UK: PUB LTE: Drug Abuse |
Published On: | 2002-03-31 |
Source: | Observer, The (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 13:59:39 |
DRUG ABUSE
You have fallen prey to the lies of American anti-drug propagandists
('Epidemic fear as "hillbilly heroin" hits UK streets', News, last week).
Oxycodone is considered a moderate opiate - half as strong as heroin, not
stronger as you state. Oxycontin, when misused, can give a heroin-like high
because the dose of Oxycodone in Oxycontin is 10 times that in the typical
tablets people have been getting for dental pain for years without hysteria
or heightened addiction. Grinding up and snorting or injecting ordinary
Oxycodone as your article suggests will sorely disappoint thrill-seekers.
Oxycontin is designed as a time-release drug for people in serious pain.
The fact that some, with encouragement from stories like yours, misuse it
does not make it a particularly deadly drug. In fact, most of the overdose
deaths mentioned (and those in general) result not from opiates alone but
from those drugs in combination with alcohol or other 'downs'. The
Oxycontin scare in the US is as much a product of the media as it is a
genuine 'epidemic'; few of the people who became addicted here were taking
it for legitimate reasons in the first place. Is it really a surprise that
people who already abuse drugs will seek the latest 'stronger than heroin'
substance?
Maia Szalavitz
New York
You have fallen prey to the lies of American anti-drug propagandists
('Epidemic fear as "hillbilly heroin" hits UK streets', News, last week).
Oxycodone is considered a moderate opiate - half as strong as heroin, not
stronger as you state. Oxycontin, when misused, can give a heroin-like high
because the dose of Oxycodone in Oxycontin is 10 times that in the typical
tablets people have been getting for dental pain for years without hysteria
or heightened addiction. Grinding up and snorting or injecting ordinary
Oxycodone as your article suggests will sorely disappoint thrill-seekers.
Oxycontin is designed as a time-release drug for people in serious pain.
The fact that some, with encouragement from stories like yours, misuse it
does not make it a particularly deadly drug. In fact, most of the overdose
deaths mentioned (and those in general) result not from opiates alone but
from those drugs in combination with alcohol or other 'downs'. The
Oxycontin scare in the US is as much a product of the media as it is a
genuine 'epidemic'; few of the people who became addicted here were taking
it for legitimate reasons in the first place. Is it really a surprise that
people who already abuse drugs will seek the latest 'stronger than heroin'
substance?
Maia Szalavitz
New York
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