News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Addiction To Painkiller Skyrockets In Western |
Title: | US PA: Addiction To Painkiller Skyrockets In Western |
Published On: | 2001-12-16 |
Source: | Tribune Review (PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 01:54:08 |
ADDICTION TO PAINKILLER SKYROCKETS IN WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA
On a warm December morning, a crowd of men and women wait for the doors to
open at Addiction Specialists Inc., a methadone clinic on Route 51 near
Uniontown.
Most are OxyContin addicts who need a daily dose of this synthetic opiate
to stave off the painful cramping, diarrhea, sweating and twitching that
accompanies withdrawal.
Methadone, which does not produce the euphoric effects of opiates, is a
lifesaver for these men and women. Without it, they likely would return to
using heroin or OxyContin.
Joe, a tall, burly addict who will only allow his first name to be used, is
one of 644 Fayette County residents who are in methadone treatment for drug
addiction this year, according to the state Health Department.
"Addiction is powerful, so powerful," the 36-year-old said. "I've laid
around for six or seven days wanting to kill myself. As soon as I got some
money in my hand, I went looking for the dope man. It never ended.
Addiction is baffling. You hurt everyone around you."
Although cocaine and marijuana remain the leading drugs of choice, abuse of
OxyContin is growing steadily in Pennsylvania, according to a report by the
National Drug Intelligence Center in Johnstown.
The powerful painkiller "is a serious and growing problem ... particularly
in western Pennsylvania," the report states. OxyContin "is the
pharmaceutical drug of choice" in this corner of the state, it adds.
OxyContin, which is prescribed for people suffering from chronic pain or
terminal illness, is the brand name for oxycodone hydrochloride.
Manufactured by Purdue Pharma, it has a high potential for abuse because it
provides 12 hours of pain relief instead of the regular four hours offered
by other drugs.
Addicts boost the drug's euphoria by crushing the tablets, which destroys
the timed-release element and gives an immediate rush that can last for
several hours.
Rising User Rates
Addiction to OxyContin has skyrocketed in Fayette County in the past year,
the report states.
This year, the county will spend $600,000 to treat opiate addicts, said
David McAdoo, director of the Fayette County Drug and Alcohol Commission.
McAdoo said the number of people addicted to opiates has increased since
the mid-1990s when only 10 people were in treatment. Today, he has 140
clients "that he can track" enrolled in treatment programs subsidized by
taxpayers.
Addiction has increased significantly in the Connellsville and Dunbar
areas, according to McAdoo and drug treatment counselors "because that's
where the dealers are," McAdoo believes.
Roz and Sean Sugarman, operators of Addiction Specialists in North Union
Township, are licensed to treat 350 addicts. Sean Sugarman said a survey of
clients revealed that 80 percent of the 330 in treatment are addicted to
OxyContin and 60 percent use the painkiller exclusively.
"It's the primary drug in Fayette County," he said. "That's why they call
it the poor man's heroin."
Seventy percent are from Connellsville and Dunbar.
In Connellsville and Dunbar, the Sugarmans said, users are crushing the
pills and inhaling the powder or cooking it into a liquid so they can
inject the drug into their veins like heroin.
Nationally, OxyContin abuse appears to be confined to the eastern United
States, according to the federal report, because addicts find it to be a
good substitute for heroin.
In Pennsylvania, heroin is overtaking cocaine as the primary drug threat,
the center found. More users, the report said, are found in smaller towns
like Connellsville rather than urban areas such as Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.
Statewide, addiction treatment for OxyContin and other opiates increased to
1,201 last year from 859 in 1999, according to the state Department of Health.
The National Drug Intelligence Center cites increases in addiction in
northern Westmoreland County, where OxyContin abuse has doubled in the past
year, as well as in Pittsburgh in Allegheny County. In Allegheny County,
749 of 3,300 clients in treatment are addicted to opiates like OxyContin,
according to the health department.
In Westmoreland County, there are 137 clients from Arnold, New Kensington,
Latrobe, Greensburg and Monessen being treated specifically for opiate
addiction - out of more than 1,900 in treatment for abusing drugs.
Increase In Crime
OxyContin abuse has been linked to an increase in crime. The federal Drug
Enforcement Administration reports that Pennsylvania has more
OxyContin-related crime than any other state.
In Cambria County, police report 30 percent of undercover drug purchases
involve OxyContin. The DEA reports OxyContin is the fastest growing drug
problem in Lawrence County.
Police in Blair County report that heroin addicts are purchasing large
amounts of OxyContin instead of heroin because users believe it is safer
than heroin and produces a better high.
Since last summer, OxyContin abuse also has led to an increase in holdups
and burglaries of pharmacies, including businesses in Greensburg and
Connellsville. The thefts are related to OxyContin, according to police.
In Greensburg, robbers stole 400 pills from a city pharmacy. Last summer,
Greensburg police arrested two people at a motel who had 300 OxyContin
tablets in their possession. Police believe the pair had been robbing
pharmacies from North Dakota to Pennsylvania for the drug.
State and municipal police departments also have reported home break- ins
in which thieves stole OxyContin from people who legitimately were
prescribed the drug.
OxyContin is not a contraband drug like heroin or cocaine.
There are no cartels in Colombia or Mexico smuggling the drug into the
United States or clandestine labs where amateur chemists cook up batches of
the drug. The only sources of OxyContin are physicians and pharmacies.
Therein may lie the problem, said Roz Sugarman, a former heroin addict herself.
"Doctors are a little too liberal with their prescription pads," Sugarman
said. "Eighty percent of our clients are strictly Oxy- addicts. They've
never used heroin. A heroin addict is a rare occasion in this building at
this point.
"Doctors bear a big responsibility for creating the OxyContin problem.
There are two types of physicians who write (bad) prescriptions. The first
is a doctor who is ignorant about dispensing prescriptions. The second is
the unethical physician who makes money off somebody's prescription."
In its report, the Drug Intelligence Center said pharmaceutical diversion
is increasing in western Pennsylvania, particularly for OxyContin, Percodan
and Tylox. All contain oxycodone.
One Doctor's Case
When Dr. Mark Fremd of Connellsville was arrested earlier this year on
drug-related charges, state Attorney General Mike Fisher publicly charged
that Fremd's alleged professional misconduct "exacerbated" Fayette County's
drug problem.
Fremd is accused of prescribing more than 95,000 individual doses of
painkillers including OxyContin, Percocet, Lortab, Vicodin and Darvocet
from 1996 through 1998, according to the arrest warrant. He also is accused
of prescribing methadone to addicts and billing insurance companies for
detoxification even though he is not licensed to operate a drug treatment
center.
Several witnesses testified before a state grand jury investigating Fremd
that they had to enter drug rehabilitation programs because they had become
addicted to OxyContin from prescriptions allegedly written by Fremd.
During Fremd's preliminary hearing, a witness testifying for prosecutors
said Fremd prescribed OxyContin for her even when she didn't want it,
according to a transcript of the hearing. She testified he would dump the
tablets out of a bottle and wrap them in a napkin before selling them to her.
Another witness, according to a police affidavit, told state drug agents he
and his wife were buying OxyContin from Fremd because they both are addicts.
One witness said Fremd didn't help her with her addiction "because Fremd is
more like a drug dealer, not a doctor because Fremd's patients get whatever
prescriptions they want from him as long as they have the money," the
affidavit states.
Roz Sugarman said doctor shopping is the main source of OxyContin for addicts.
She said one client drove from Pittsburgh to Johnstown several times a week
to see a physician for back pain treatment despite the availability of back
specialists in Pittsburgh. "He went to Johnstown because he found a doctor
who was writing prescription for OxyContin," she added.
Joe, the addict, said it is easy to get OxyContin from physicians. He
estimated eight out of 10 doctors he would make appointments with
prescribed OxyContin without asking any questions or doing a physical exam.
Joe said he once saw a Connellsville physician for severe leg pain. He
showed the doctor a scar running from his knee to his ankle from an
operation following an accident.
"He told me to drop my pants. He took one look at the scar and asked me how
much money I had in my pocket. I said $100. He gave me 60 OxyContin."
It's that easy, said Joe. "First, you find out who's writing. Have some
money. Dress pretty well. If you know a doctor who's writing, he knows why
you're there. It was pretty much that easy."
Mixing Drugs
Dr. Anthony Stiles, an addiction specialist with Comprehensive Substance
Abuse Services in Greensburg, said OxyContin addicts are taking the drug
with powerful sedatives, which can paralyze the respiratory system, causing
death.
"There's a substantial population that is using OxyContin exclusively with
Soma, a muscle relaxant which also has addictive potential," Stiles said.
"In 1998, when I first started here, you almost never saw a patient abusing
or even prescribed OxyContin. Now it's more frequent."
Stiles said doctors learn in medical school that morphine is a "top-
of-the-line painkiller" and should be prescribed sparingly. He said
morphine is as powerful as OxyContin but you seldom see people addicted to it.
"It's almost never prescribed or abused," Stiles continued. "But doctors
feel more comfortable prescribing OxyContin as an outpatient."
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has strengthened label warnings on
packaging to force physicians to be more aware of their prescription practices.
Roz Sugarman said she worries about the spread of OxyContin because the
clients treated at her clinic are getting younger. "I don't know how many
are out there that haven't got to us yet."
On a warm December morning, a crowd of men and women wait for the doors to
open at Addiction Specialists Inc., a methadone clinic on Route 51 near
Uniontown.
Most are OxyContin addicts who need a daily dose of this synthetic opiate
to stave off the painful cramping, diarrhea, sweating and twitching that
accompanies withdrawal.
Methadone, which does not produce the euphoric effects of opiates, is a
lifesaver for these men and women. Without it, they likely would return to
using heroin or OxyContin.
Joe, a tall, burly addict who will only allow his first name to be used, is
one of 644 Fayette County residents who are in methadone treatment for drug
addiction this year, according to the state Health Department.
"Addiction is powerful, so powerful," the 36-year-old said. "I've laid
around for six or seven days wanting to kill myself. As soon as I got some
money in my hand, I went looking for the dope man. It never ended.
Addiction is baffling. You hurt everyone around you."
Although cocaine and marijuana remain the leading drugs of choice, abuse of
OxyContin is growing steadily in Pennsylvania, according to a report by the
National Drug Intelligence Center in Johnstown.
The powerful painkiller "is a serious and growing problem ... particularly
in western Pennsylvania," the report states. OxyContin "is the
pharmaceutical drug of choice" in this corner of the state, it adds.
OxyContin, which is prescribed for people suffering from chronic pain or
terminal illness, is the brand name for oxycodone hydrochloride.
Manufactured by Purdue Pharma, it has a high potential for abuse because it
provides 12 hours of pain relief instead of the regular four hours offered
by other drugs.
Addicts boost the drug's euphoria by crushing the tablets, which destroys
the timed-release element and gives an immediate rush that can last for
several hours.
Rising User Rates
Addiction to OxyContin has skyrocketed in Fayette County in the past year,
the report states.
This year, the county will spend $600,000 to treat opiate addicts, said
David McAdoo, director of the Fayette County Drug and Alcohol Commission.
McAdoo said the number of people addicted to opiates has increased since
the mid-1990s when only 10 people were in treatment. Today, he has 140
clients "that he can track" enrolled in treatment programs subsidized by
taxpayers.
Addiction has increased significantly in the Connellsville and Dunbar
areas, according to McAdoo and drug treatment counselors "because that's
where the dealers are," McAdoo believes.
Roz and Sean Sugarman, operators of Addiction Specialists in North Union
Township, are licensed to treat 350 addicts. Sean Sugarman said a survey of
clients revealed that 80 percent of the 330 in treatment are addicted to
OxyContin and 60 percent use the painkiller exclusively.
"It's the primary drug in Fayette County," he said. "That's why they call
it the poor man's heroin."
Seventy percent are from Connellsville and Dunbar.
In Connellsville and Dunbar, the Sugarmans said, users are crushing the
pills and inhaling the powder or cooking it into a liquid so they can
inject the drug into their veins like heroin.
Nationally, OxyContin abuse appears to be confined to the eastern United
States, according to the federal report, because addicts find it to be a
good substitute for heroin.
In Pennsylvania, heroin is overtaking cocaine as the primary drug threat,
the center found. More users, the report said, are found in smaller towns
like Connellsville rather than urban areas such as Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.
Statewide, addiction treatment for OxyContin and other opiates increased to
1,201 last year from 859 in 1999, according to the state Department of Health.
The National Drug Intelligence Center cites increases in addiction in
northern Westmoreland County, where OxyContin abuse has doubled in the past
year, as well as in Pittsburgh in Allegheny County. In Allegheny County,
749 of 3,300 clients in treatment are addicted to opiates like OxyContin,
according to the health department.
In Westmoreland County, there are 137 clients from Arnold, New Kensington,
Latrobe, Greensburg and Monessen being treated specifically for opiate
addiction - out of more than 1,900 in treatment for abusing drugs.
Increase In Crime
OxyContin abuse has been linked to an increase in crime. The federal Drug
Enforcement Administration reports that Pennsylvania has more
OxyContin-related crime than any other state.
In Cambria County, police report 30 percent of undercover drug purchases
involve OxyContin. The DEA reports OxyContin is the fastest growing drug
problem in Lawrence County.
Police in Blair County report that heroin addicts are purchasing large
amounts of OxyContin instead of heroin because users believe it is safer
than heroin and produces a better high.
Since last summer, OxyContin abuse also has led to an increase in holdups
and burglaries of pharmacies, including businesses in Greensburg and
Connellsville. The thefts are related to OxyContin, according to police.
In Greensburg, robbers stole 400 pills from a city pharmacy. Last summer,
Greensburg police arrested two people at a motel who had 300 OxyContin
tablets in their possession. Police believe the pair had been robbing
pharmacies from North Dakota to Pennsylvania for the drug.
State and municipal police departments also have reported home break- ins
in which thieves stole OxyContin from people who legitimately were
prescribed the drug.
OxyContin is not a contraband drug like heroin or cocaine.
There are no cartels in Colombia or Mexico smuggling the drug into the
United States or clandestine labs where amateur chemists cook up batches of
the drug. The only sources of OxyContin are physicians and pharmacies.
Therein may lie the problem, said Roz Sugarman, a former heroin addict herself.
"Doctors are a little too liberal with their prescription pads," Sugarman
said. "Eighty percent of our clients are strictly Oxy- addicts. They've
never used heroin. A heroin addict is a rare occasion in this building at
this point.
"Doctors bear a big responsibility for creating the OxyContin problem.
There are two types of physicians who write (bad) prescriptions. The first
is a doctor who is ignorant about dispensing prescriptions. The second is
the unethical physician who makes money off somebody's prescription."
In its report, the Drug Intelligence Center said pharmaceutical diversion
is increasing in western Pennsylvania, particularly for OxyContin, Percodan
and Tylox. All contain oxycodone.
One Doctor's Case
When Dr. Mark Fremd of Connellsville was arrested earlier this year on
drug-related charges, state Attorney General Mike Fisher publicly charged
that Fremd's alleged professional misconduct "exacerbated" Fayette County's
drug problem.
Fremd is accused of prescribing more than 95,000 individual doses of
painkillers including OxyContin, Percocet, Lortab, Vicodin and Darvocet
from 1996 through 1998, according to the arrest warrant. He also is accused
of prescribing methadone to addicts and billing insurance companies for
detoxification even though he is not licensed to operate a drug treatment
center.
Several witnesses testified before a state grand jury investigating Fremd
that they had to enter drug rehabilitation programs because they had become
addicted to OxyContin from prescriptions allegedly written by Fremd.
During Fremd's preliminary hearing, a witness testifying for prosecutors
said Fremd prescribed OxyContin for her even when she didn't want it,
according to a transcript of the hearing. She testified he would dump the
tablets out of a bottle and wrap them in a napkin before selling them to her.
Another witness, according to a police affidavit, told state drug agents he
and his wife were buying OxyContin from Fremd because they both are addicts.
One witness said Fremd didn't help her with her addiction "because Fremd is
more like a drug dealer, not a doctor because Fremd's patients get whatever
prescriptions they want from him as long as they have the money," the
affidavit states.
Roz Sugarman said doctor shopping is the main source of OxyContin for addicts.
She said one client drove from Pittsburgh to Johnstown several times a week
to see a physician for back pain treatment despite the availability of back
specialists in Pittsburgh. "He went to Johnstown because he found a doctor
who was writing prescription for OxyContin," she added.
Joe, the addict, said it is easy to get OxyContin from physicians. He
estimated eight out of 10 doctors he would make appointments with
prescribed OxyContin without asking any questions or doing a physical exam.
Joe said he once saw a Connellsville physician for severe leg pain. He
showed the doctor a scar running from his knee to his ankle from an
operation following an accident.
"He told me to drop my pants. He took one look at the scar and asked me how
much money I had in my pocket. I said $100. He gave me 60 OxyContin."
It's that easy, said Joe. "First, you find out who's writing. Have some
money. Dress pretty well. If you know a doctor who's writing, he knows why
you're there. It was pretty much that easy."
Mixing Drugs
Dr. Anthony Stiles, an addiction specialist with Comprehensive Substance
Abuse Services in Greensburg, said OxyContin addicts are taking the drug
with powerful sedatives, which can paralyze the respiratory system, causing
death.
"There's a substantial population that is using OxyContin exclusively with
Soma, a muscle relaxant which also has addictive potential," Stiles said.
"In 1998, when I first started here, you almost never saw a patient abusing
or even prescribed OxyContin. Now it's more frequent."
Stiles said doctors learn in medical school that morphine is a "top-
of-the-line painkiller" and should be prescribed sparingly. He said
morphine is as powerful as OxyContin but you seldom see people addicted to it.
"It's almost never prescribed or abused," Stiles continued. "But doctors
feel more comfortable prescribing OxyContin as an outpatient."
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has strengthened label warnings on
packaging to force physicians to be more aware of their prescription practices.
Roz Sugarman said she worries about the spread of OxyContin because the
clients treated at her clinic are getting younger. "I don't know how many
are out there that haven't got to us yet."
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