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Painkiller Overdose Deaths Triple In Decade

STEPHANIE NANO   11/01/11 06:03 PM ET  AP

NEW YORK — The number of overdose deaths from powerful painkillers more than tripled over a decade, the government reported Tuesday – a trend that a U.S. health official called an epidemic, but one that can be stopped.

Prescription painkillers such as OxyContin, Vicodin and methadone led to the deaths of almost 15,000 people in 2008, including actor Heath Ledger. That's more than three times the 4,000 deaths from narcotics in 1999.

Such painkillers "are meant to help people who have severe pain," said Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, which issued the report. "They are, however, highly addictive."

The report shows nearly 5 percent of Americans ages 12 and older said they've abused painkillers in the past year – using them without a prescription or just for the high. In 2008-09 surveys, Oklahomans reported the highest rate of abuse; the lowest was in Nebraska and Iowa.

The overdose deaths reflect the spike in the number of narcotic painkillers prescribed every year – enough to give every American a one-month supply, Frieden said.

Prescriptions rose as doctors aimed to better treat pain and as new painkillers hit the market.

Frieden and White House drug czar Gil Kerlikowske, who joined him at CDC headquarters in Atlanta, said states need to take sharp actions to reverse the long-running trend.

States oversee prescription practices and can rigorously monitor prescriptions and crack down on "pill mills" and "doctor shopping" by patients, Frieden said.

Doctors should limit prescriptions – giving only a three-day supply for acute pain, for example – and look for alternative treatments, he said.

"For chronic pain, narcotics should be the last resort," he added.

A federal drug plan announced this year calls for state programs to track prescriptions. All but two states – Missouri and New Hampshire – have approved them, said Kerlikowske. But a number of states don't have them in place yet or doctors aren't using them enough to check on their patients' past prescriptions, he said.

"America's prescription drug abuse epidemic is not a problem that's going to be solved overnight, but at the same time, we're not powerless," said Kerlikowske, who urged parents to get rid of unneeded or expired painkillers so they aren't misused.

Some states are taking action. Earlier this month, a doctor in Southern California was sentenced to prison for illegally selling tens of thousands of prescriptions for painkillers and sedative. Ohio now requires pain clinics to be licensed by the state, and limits the amount of pills that can be dispensed at clinics. Florida also has cracked down on so-called "pill mills."

Overall, there were 36,450 fatal overdoses in 2008, including accidental cases and suicides involving illegal drugs like heroin and cocaine along with prescription medicines. About three-quarters of the deaths from prescriptions involved narcotic painkillers.

That's the year Ledger died from an accidental overdose of painkillers and sedatives. A few months later, a 12-year-old girl from suburban New York overdosed on methadone she bought from a 15-year-old boy.

Narcotics also played a role in the recent deaths of a 27-year-old model at the mansion of an Anheuser-Busch heir and of former hockey player Derek Boogaard.

Other findings of the CDC report:

_ New Mexico had the highest overdose death rate (27 per 100,000) and Nebraska had the lowest (5.5). The national rate was 11.9.

_ Fatal overdoses were more likely in men, middle-aged adults and whites and American Indians.

_ Sales of prescription painkillers are highest in the Southeast and Northwest.

Frieden noted the wide differences between overdose death rates among states. For example, West Virginia's rate is about 26 per 100,000 while neighboring Virginia's rate is only 9.

"This highlights the importance of states getting policies right on preventing drug abuse," he said.

__

Online:

CDC report: http://cdc.gov/mmwr/

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farmilyman
everything is illusion
10:44 AM on 11/02/2011
Makes you wonder why FL's Rick Scott vetoed a bill to shut down rampant pill mills in his state
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metalsmithgirl71
Just say NO to GMO's!
08:49 AM on 11/02/2011
doctors need to be held more accountable for doling out prescriptions for these pills. they just give out their little slips of paper to anyone and everyone. no, they're not the whole problem, but they are a HUGE part of it. i've heard of people in my town who get xanax for their "nerves", on medicaid, then sell the pills for a few dollars a piece. the police don't fool with them because it's one person. it's not worth their time. they don't realize that one adds to many. it has to start somewhere to make it STOP.
06:34 AM on 11/02/2011
"For chronic pain, narcotics should be the last resort," he added. I couldn't agree more with this strategy.
02:43 PM on 11/02/2011
if you're in chronic pain, you are already at the court of last resort. i have 12 ruptured discs.
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spydrworks1067
04:53 AM on 11/02/2011
Simple solution: Federally legalize medical marijuana.
01:27 AM on 11/02/2011
THE PEOPLE WHO ACTUALLY NEED PAIN MEDS ARE NOT THE ONES OVERDOSING. THE ARTICLE SHOULD BE ABOUT ADDICTS WHO USE PAIN MEDS FOR THE HIGH IT GIVES THEM.
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11:17 PM on 11/01/2011
THE BIG problem here is that the government always overreacts. There are millions of people that NEED Narcotic pain relievers becaus they need them, My wife being on. The poor lady leterally cant get out of bed most days because of back and leg pain and se has been prescribed Morphine for 2 years because it`s all that helps. She sticks with the exact dose her doctor gives and sometimes when not as bad she goes lower. There is a BIG need for these drugs but maybe they could regulate something like a certain amount for a short time, see how the patient acts and responds and go from there. My wifes doctor started her on the lowest narcotic as far as im concerned, Tylenol 3 with Codiene and she suffered for a year because it did very little. After that and instead of going to Vicodin etc she put her on morphine (Low dose) wich helped alot more and upped it as time went on. She is now on her max dose and has been for a year and she now walks dogs 10 hours a day and is doing wonderfully.
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
09:19 AM on 11/02/2011
i'm glad it helps her and that she gets what she needs. i wish her well,
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01:43 PM on 11/02/2011
Thanks sabelmouse. It`s funny.... I tell soe people, even family and the first thing they say is "MORPHINE????" Well it helos, she does not walk around like a Zombie and she can live her life.
10:45 PM on 11/01/2011
Just put it OTC and let people live their own lives (or not). Government regulation is kicking us all in the pockets.
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Raven1970
Do not be a pre-checked box, opt out
02:37 PM on 11/02/2011
Actually the pharmaceutical companies are kicking us all in the pockets...they are legal drug dealers....their pills are paid for with insurance money, driving up the cost of healthcare for everyone and then these pills are being sold to kids in their teens and twenties at $20 a pill. Oxycontins are called Roxy's, they are crushed and snorted by kids today and they are everywhere...it may not kill them all, but it sure creates allot of young drug addicts.... I mean customers.
10:08 PM on 11/01/2011
Marijuana would be a terrific pain reliever. Let's all work to legalize it.
People are going to smoke it for recreation just as people drink.
unique
Animal lover forever
12:35 AM on 11/02/2011
And no one has overdosed from marijuana.
05:22 AM on 11/02/2011
Works great for chemo. You can actually eat and no more vomiting.
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
09:20 AM on 11/02/2011
good to know.
10:04 PM on 11/01/2011
If one has bad chronic pain and none of the otc's work what is one to take? I've been in 11 accidents, am going on 78 yrs old, have FMS,, neuropathy, bursitis, osteoporosis and started taking a low dose of vicodin several months ago. Altho it doesn't completely take away the pain it does curb it some. Without it I just stay home.
07:49 PM on 11/01/2011
this is all well and good, to focus on legal means of closing loopholes so addicts can't play with the toy of the moment, prescription drugs. (i personally can't wait until they move on to the Next Big Thing.) but at the same time, let's not forgot the already forgotten: those that deal every day with painful chronic conditions like spinal stenosis (aka "creeping paralysis.") i've been living with this genetic illness my entire adult life (12 ruptured discs and counting) and i need this medicine just to accomplish a few basic tasks each day. (i also receive painful injections to the spine and do PT.) i wouldn't even think of swallowing a handful of pills, or snorting them or injecting them, the way addicts do. why? i'm sick enough already, and know full well that i'm a mortal being. i'm not a thrill seeker and this medicine doesn't make me high because i don't abuse it. but there is currently a witchhunt mentality in florida, where i currently live, and i'm afraid that soon i won't be able to get this medicine at all, which was, after all, designed for people like me. i wonder, who cares about the chronically ill? arthritis of the spine is probably the most boring topic i know, and i have it! i do have sympathy for the problems of people with addictive personalities. i just wish those of us who are dealing with extraordinary pain got a little love too.
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
09:22 AM on 11/02/2011
add to that that many people see chronically ill as malingerers or hypochondriacs . there is not not much love forth coming.
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Katie Reynolds
06:51 PM on 11/01/2011
These are the companies paying billion of dollars to our government every year to keep weed illegal. Congrats
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Raven1970
Do not be a pre-checked box, opt out
03:00 PM on 11/02/2011
The problem with making marijuana legal is that everyone could grow their own...where is the PROFIT in that???