Tightening the Rules on Oxycontin Pushes Abusers and Pain Sufferers Toward More Dangerous Drugs
"The most unexpected, and probably detrimental, effect of the abuse-deterrent formulation was that it contributed to a huge surge in the use of heroin," reads a letter in the New England Journal of Medicine, written by researchers at the University of Washington:
"We're now seeing reports from across the country of large quantities of heroin appearing in suburbs and rural areas. Unable to use OxyContin easily, which was a very popular drug in suburban and rural areas, drug abusers who prefer snorting or IV drug administration now have shifted either to more potent opioids, if they can find them, or to heroin."
Since the researchers started gathering data from patients admitted to drug treatment centers, the number of users who selected OxyContin as their primary drug of abuse has decreased from 35.6 percent of respondents before the release of the abuse-deterrent formulation to 12.8 percent now.
When users answered a question about which opioid they used to get high "in the past 30 days at least once," OxyContin fell from 47.4 percent of respondents to 30 percent. During the same time period, reported use of heroin nearly doubled.
In addition to answering a confidential questionnaire when admitted to a drug treatment program, more than 125 of the study subjects also agreed to longer phone interviews during which they discussed their drug use and the impact of the new OxyContin formulation on their individual choices.
"When we asked if they had stopped using OxyContin, the normal response was 'yes,'" Cicero says. "And then when we asked about what drug they were using now, most said something like: 'Because of the decreased availability of OxyContin, I switched to heroin.'"
Jacob Sullum wrote about this phenomenon last year, when Ohio reported that its OxyContin diversion efforts had made the pills more expensive, and thus heroin more alluring.
And because prescribing Oxy is tantamount to inviting a DEA audit, doctors are prescribing methadone more often, which accumulates in the system over time and can depress breathing. As a result, deaths from methadone are on the rise, says a new report from the Centers for Disease Control:
Increased use of methadone since 1999 might have been prompted by growing costs of treating pain with opioids and increasing reports of abuse of other, more expensive, extended-release opioids (1). Overdose reports and interventions by FDA and DEA might have resulted in declines in the amount of methadone distributed and methadone-related fatal overdoses in 2008, although the number of methadone prescriptions did not decline. The parallel trends in the amount of methadone distributed for use as a pain reliever and in the methadone mortality rate are consistent with methadone prescribed as a pain reliever being the primary determinant of methadone mortality rates (1,3).
Data suggest that some of the current uses of methadone for pain might be inappropriate. According to an analysis conducted by FDA, the most common diagnoses associated with methadone use for pain in 2009 were musculoskeletal problems (such as back pain and arthritis) (46%), headaches (17%), cancer (11%), and trauma (5%). Most methadone prescriptions were written by primary care providers or mid-level practitioners (e.g., nurse practitioners) rather than pain specialists. Nearly a third of prescriptions appear to have been dispensed to patients with no opioid prescriptions in the previous month (i.e., opioid-naïve patients) (10).
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1th!
The War on Drugs is of course evil, but sadly we're just preaching to the choir here.
Firth of Fourth.
We only focus on consequences that were intended. The others are not our fault.
Blatantly obvious effects should not be unexpected. Also, Dunphy was talking about a recent surge in opiate ODs. I wonder if changing from carefully measured pharmaceuticals to street drugs of completely unknown purity could possible cause people to take too much of a drug? Hmmm.
On the plus side, this should mean that urban hipsters will no longer be making fun of suburban and rural dwellers for abusing a lower class sort of drug, right?
only in govt can banning something be equated to "abuse deterrence." Making something difficult to get does not stop the problem; it just shifts it elsewhere.
Because some folks abuse Oxy, it is the problem. Because a few folks found an alternative use for it, Sudafed requires signing over one's first born. Goddamn it.
A drug that some addicts have adopted as a replacement for OxyContin is slowly having an impact in the southwestern Ontario city of Sarnia, and at least one resident whose wife died from a Fentanyl overdose says he's speaking out to prevent other deaths.
Even the cops were able to predict what would happen when Oxycontin became harder to get.
I have to wonder if this is something the DEA will consider a sign of success. And after seeing what happened to this clinic (where undercover agents lied to the doctors to get prescriptions, then arrested them for doing so) and the press' parroting of the DEA's allegations, it's amazing that doctors ever prescribe pain killers to anyone (especially if they have dirty fingernails).
So theres a popular opiate pill that can be easily crushed to defeat the time-release mechanism. After this it can be snorted or injected with relative ease. It is replaced with something so packed with binders and wax that it barely works when used as directed, cant be snorted, and can't be injected. And i'm supposed to be suprised when people turn to heroin to get their fix. Anyone who didn't see this coming a mile away is fucking blind.
How about tramadol? I'm on that now for herpes zoster pain. It's great for losing weight and for making you sleep more.
Clearly the change in the oxycontin formula has caused increased devastation for current users. However, I wonder if the change could do some good in preventing people from starting to abuse opiates to begin with. The average suburban kid is not going to try heroin and most likely wouldn't know where to get it anyway. But a pill you can steal from grandma that you can crush and snort is much more attractive. There is little doubt that opiate abuse and addiction has increased with the launch of oxycontin and hopefully these changes will at least stop the ongoing increase, and maybe even decrease opiate addiction and abuse.