Re: Methadone deaths rising in New England



On Apr 19, 5:06 pm, "OldGoat" <oldgoatm...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Dear Kitty,

Something else to consider. Recently the DEA made the 40mg tablet of
methadone available only to rehab facilities. A very wise move, considering
the only other dose size is a 10 mg tablet. So now the DEA, in it's wisdom,
has just quadrupled the number of tablets available to be diverted to the
black market...

No mention of that in the article--og

--
Be Sure to Check Out the PAYNE HERTZ blog, for people with chronic pain, by
people with chronic pain.
join in at:http://paynehertz.blogspot.com

"kittychats" <eileen...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message

news:1fad90b7-870b-443c-8376-efda8b4838ee@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Egads! I don't even take methadone nor do I live in New England,
however I found the following news article online today truly
frightening. As those with chronic pain do, I realize that it could be
a medication I may require in the future and I can certainly see where
this fear based witch hunt is headed:

LACONIA, N.H. — When her 20-year-old son stumbled home one night last
October, Gail DeLucca told him to go to bed and sleep it off. "I love
you, Ray," she called up the stairs, figuring she would wait until
morning to lecture him about drinking.
But it wasn't alcohol that made her son so woozy. It was methadone,
and it killed him.

Raymond DeLucca was one of 168 people to die of drug overdoses in New
Hampshire last year. That was more than the number killed in car
crashes. More than half the drug deaths involved methadone, and an
alarming eight of them happened in Laconia, a city of about 17,000.

"After about the fifth one, we had a meeting and said this is crazy,"
said Police Chief Michael Moyer.

Nationwide, methadone deaths are increasing at a faster rate than any
other drug-related deaths, the National Center for Health Statistics
reported in February. According to the most recent data available, the
number of methadone deaths nationwide rose from 786 in 1999 to 4,462
in 2005, a nearly six-fold increase. By comparison, fatal cocaine
overdoses rose 63%, from 3,832 to 6,228.

Though it is best known as a prescription drug that curbs heroin
addiction, methadone has been increasingly prescribed as a pain
medication, and officials say it is those pills that have led to the
increase in deaths.

In the many cases, the drug is being stolen in transit between
manufacturers and pharmacies. Also, patients with methadone
prescriptions are selling or sharing their pills.

In some states, including Maine and New Hampshire, methadone has
become the leading cause of drug-related deaths, overtaking even
cocaine and heroin. That is prompting some police and prosecutors to
get tough.

In Vermont, a woman was charged last month with giving methadone to a
friend who slipped into a coma and died. In New Hampshire, four people
have been charged in connection with DeLucca's death, and a task force
is investigating Laconia's seven other deaths in hopes of bringing
charges.

"In past years on an overdose death, no, we would not usually have
done a really thorough investigation," Moyer said. "Now we treat it
more like a crime scene when we go to one of these."

Gail DeLucca said she realizes that her son wasn't blameless — she
knew he had a drug problem — but she wants the others involved to be
held accountable. The methadone that killed him was obtained illegally
from a friend who had bought it from a local couple, she said.

"It was a bad choice, and he paid for it with his life," she said. But
"the other people made a bad choice in selling it, and now it's their
turn to pay for what they did."

Though methadone isn't the leading cause of drug deaths in Vermont —
the painkiller oxycodone, often sold under the brand name OxyContin,
holds that distinction — nearly three-quarters of the 80 drug-related
deaths last year involved the class of drug to which both oxycodone
and methadone belong.

The problem isn't limited to the northern New England — Utah, Kentucky
and Washington, for example, had similar methadone death rates — and
experts say there is nothing particular to the Northeast that is
contributing to the trend.

"We are simply at a point in time where in New England and the Eastern
Seaboard, methadone is the drug with 'street cred' right now, whereas
methamphetamine leads the pack elsewhere," said Dr. Thomas Andrew, New
Hampshire's medical examiner.

Methadone is cheaper than other prescribed painkillers and is easily
diverted to the black market.

Though methadone does not itself produce a high, it is often combined
with other drugs in hopes of creating one. But for someone who has a
low tolerance, even low doses can be dangerous. Methadone is
particularly hazardous because of the slow way in which it is
metabolized.

"It takes a while for its action to be perceived by the patient, and
in this age of instant gratification — 'Hey, I still hurt' — they grab
a second one or even a third one, and by the time everything kicks in,
they wake up dead," Andrew said.

The medical examiner is pushing for electronic prescription monitoring
to prevent people from getting multiple methadone prescriptions from
different doctors and pharmacies.

About 30 states have such programs, including Maine and Vermont, but
New Hampshire rejected the idea three times recently. Opponents
consider it an invasion of privacy and an invitation for police
fishing expeditions.

In Laconia, the police chief's task force is focusing on educating
schoolchildren and other members of the public about methadone,
displaying a big "Eight Is Enough" banner with pictures of some of the
victims. No one has died of a methadone overdose in the city since
DeLucca in October.

"I think a lot of people are now afraid to use it," Moyer said.
"That's what I'm hoping, anyway. Or certainly they'll think twice
about taking too much. if any at all."

At the time of his death, DeLucca was working two jobs and studying to
get his high school equivalency degree in hopes of joining the
National Guard.

Gail DeLucca said she would like to see his picture displayed at the
convenience stores where young people buy beer before heading out to
party. The message: "Think about this before you decide what you're
going to do tonight, before you make your bad decision.

"By Holly Ramer, Associated Press Writer"

I agree that personal responsibility is a big part of this problem.
But, as much as it pains me to say, I have started to question how
safe Methadone is too. I realize we have CPers here that use methadone
with no problems, but when I start paying attention to those stats, it
makes me feel as if methadone might overthrow Oxycontin for being
blamed for killing most people that overdose. Of coarse I'm basing
much of what I think from what the news media says- and thats the flaw
with my thinking. I realize how bogus the media can get when reporting
about drugs. They always hype it up, and make any, ANY type of
narcotic out to be ticking time bombs. Rarely do they ever try to
report on a level playing field, although I feel they are slowly
getting better at it.

No Money
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Methadone deaths rising in New England
    ... be, causing these deaths. ... I don't even take methadone nor do I live in New England, ... Raymond DeLucca was one of 168 people to die of drug overdoses in New ... The medical examiner is pushing for electronic prescription monitoring ...
    (alt.support.chronic-pain)
  • Drug Poisoning Kills More Than Guns
    ... Drug Poisoning Deaths on the Rise ... A second study, this one published in February, blames one narcotic drug specifically for the lethal trend: methadone, a drug often prescribed to treat chronic pain. ...
    (talk.politics.guns)
  • Blue State Drug Epidemic - Methadone Deaths Are Rising in New England; Police Get Tough
    ... Methadone Deaths Are Rising in New England; ... More than half the drug deaths involved methadone, and an alarming eight of them happened in Laconia, a city of about 17,000. ... "After about the fifth one, we had a meeting and said this is crazy," said Police Chief Michael Moyer. ...
    (alt.politics)
  • Re: New Senate Bill Targets Methadone
    ... the prescription drug, but some are worried it could lead to less ... government report stated that the use of methadone for pain management ... has caused a spike in overdoses of the drug. ... "My only concern is it will limit the chronic pain treatment ...
    (alt.support.chronic-pain)
  • Re: New Senate Bill Targets Methadone
    ... Methadone usually is not for breakthrough pain. ... has caused a spike in overdoses of the drug. ... Like other prescription drugs, methadone can be abused. ...
    (alt.support.chronic-pain)