HEALTH Unintended consequences: Why painkiller addicts turn to heroin

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
By Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN Chief Medical Correspondent,
updated 7:14 AM EDT, Sat August 30, 2014

Back in the 1960s, heroin users were usually young men, who started using around an average age of 16. They were most likely from low-income neighborhoods, and when they turned to opiates, heroin was their first choice.

Now, more than 50 years later, a study from JAMA paints a very different picture.

Today's typical heroin addict starts using at 23, is more likely to live in the affluent suburbs and was likely unwittingly led to heroin through painkillers prescribed by his or her doctor.

While heroin is illicit and opioid pills such as oxycontin are FDA-approved, each is derived from the poppy plant. Their chemical structures are highly similar and they bind to the same group of receptors in the brain. (A few opioids, like fentanyl, are totally synthetic but designed to bind with those same receptors).

In any case, the various drugs produce the same result: an increase in pain tolerance and a sense of euphoria, along with drowsiness, occasional nausea and, at higher doses, a slowing of the user's breathing.

All these drugs trigger "tolerance" -- the need to take higher doses for the same effect -- and a craving for the drug in its absence.

It is precisely because there are so many similarities that pain pill addicts frequently turn to heroin when pills are no longer available to them.

Heroin is usually cheaper than prescription drugs. Opiate pain medications cost the uninsured about $1 per milligram; so a 60-milligram pill will cost $60. You can obtain the equivalent amount of heroin for about one-tenth the price.

This may be news to you, but it's likely not to some of your neighbors, friends and family members.

Last year, the Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte spent time trying to better understand the patients who were coming into detox for heroin. What they found were cops, lawyers, nurses and ministers who came from some of the best neighborhoods in the area.

Most of them shared a common story: "We used to take pills, but now we inject heroin."

For years, we have been railing about the flagrant abuse of pain pills in the United States. Former President Bill Clinton called me a couple years ago after he lost two friends to accidental prescription drug overdose. As we dug into the issue together, we were stunned to learn 80% of the world's pain pills are consumed in the United States, which has just 5% of the world's population.

As a result, accidental prescription drug overdose is now the leading cause of acute preventable death for Americans. Someone dies in this manner every 19 minutes. That is more deaths than from car accidents.

The response to these tragic statistics has been gratifying and effective, but somewhat shortsighted.

Doctors have been less willing to prescribe medications, especially in states like Florida, formerly known for its pill mills, where tighter restrictions on prescribers led to a 23% drop in overdose deaths between 2010 and 2012.

The drugs themselves have been tweaked as well. In August 2010, an abuse deterrent version of Oxycontin was released to great fanfare. It was reformulated so it could not as easily be crushed or solubilized so abusers would have a difficult time injecting or snorting it. Within two years, the choice of oxycontin as a drug of abuse went from 35.6% to 12.8%.

That was the good news. The bad news is that the same study showed heroin use nearly doubled.

It became apparent that drug abusers weren't going to stop as a result of government crackdowns or new technologies. They were simply morphing into people who abused other drugs.

Oxycontin used to be called the hillbilly heroin. Society and technology helped fix that problem. But addicts started turning back to real heroin instead.

A spokeswoman with the National Institute on Drug Abuse told us recently that nearly half of young people who inject heroin say they abused prescription opioids before turning to the illegal drug.

The headlines are horrifying and for good reason. The abuse of opiate pills and heroin are both taking a tremendous toll on the United States.

They are leading to increased crime, decreased productivity and they're stealing the lives of too many people. While it is nearly impossible to pit one evil against another, it is important to remember that heroin, as a street drug, is unregulated, often impure and usually injected.

As a result, heroin users suffer from collapsed veins, abscesses, infections of the heart lining and valves, and rheumatological diseases. From sharing needles, they are more likely to suffer from HIV, Hepatitis and other blood diseases.

And just like their pill popping counterparts, they die of overdose in shocking numbers.

Some countries are more willing than the United States to pursue a strategy of harm reduction -- that is, to steer addicts away from the most dangerous types of behavior. A number of countries have implemented programs that actually provide heroin to addicts; some studies (PDF) show that doing so improves addicts' health and reduces their use of other illicit drugs.

Yet in general, the U.S. strategy has not been harm reduction, but to target users and doctors.

While all of this was unexpected, it was likely also predictable. Medication or drugs aren't the problem; it's the intrinsic behavior of human beings. We don't need to treat the drugs we are taking; we need to treat the drug addiction we are suffering.

Like the people who take the pills in the first place, society wanted a quick fix. Instead of treating the core cause of drug addiction, we implemented blanket policies to restrict the medications, alter them and place them increasingly out of reach. Yet human beings are smart, and it was easy to reach for something on a lower shelf, more easily accessible.

Make no mistake, the crackdown on opiates was a good thing, but there have been unintended consequences.

On one side, patients with legitimate pain have been caught in the crossfire, easily dismissed as malingerers and unable to get relief. On the other side, abusers have become more creative, turning to heroin to feed their addiction.

We must work to make sure treatment for drug addiction is a pillar of drug policy in the United States. We already know that it can work at levels similar to the effects of treatment of other chronic diseases, such as diabetes, hypertension and asthma.

Good doctors don't focus on the symptoms of a disease; they want to ultimately treat the disease itself. If we do the same here, we can rid America of this awful drug habit, and save many lives in the process.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/29/health/gupta-unintended-consequences/index.html?hpt=hp_c4
 

dstraito

TB Fanatic
It is hard for people truly in catastrophic pain to abuse pain medicine. The abuses come either from those around them not in pain taking the medicine or those in originally in pain having the pain leave them and they continue on the drugs.

I've seen people in so much pain take enough drugs that would kill an ordinary pain-free person but the medicine just allows them to live with the massive pain.
 

amysgarden

Inactive
I think this article is misleading. Yes, most people on heroin start with prescription drugs- because that is the first, easiest "high" to obtain. But almost all that I have come across, were looking for the high in the beginning. Normal people who get pancreatitis or cancer or have shoulder surgery do not go to heroin after the pain meds run out. They either taper off (and don't realize the few days of feeling crappy are from coming off their dependence of narcotics) or they stop when they naturally need to.

I think there are a few who turn to heroin when medicine refuses to treat their pain- people who have been in catastrophic traumas or have diseases that leave them in real, long term pain. These folks are more rare- usually they are the ones who go from doc to doc just trying to get the only meds that seem to dull their pain. Many, many, many of these chronic pain sufferers end up turning to the ONE last easy, legal drug to treat their pain- alcohol. That is a terrible substitute - I think vicodin or percocet is much safer than vodka in treating pain.

I see the consequences of heroin use daily in the emergency department. It is much worse and ultimately more costly to taxpayers, than making regular narcotics more easy to obtain.

I think that addicts are going to use no matter what we do. But an addict who takes X milligrams of oxycodone at least knows WHAT they are taking and can take an amount that is relatively known to them, safe for them. Heroin is a constant crapshoot.

There is treatment for heroin addiction that is very helpful- suboxone. It doesn't give a high (not really) and takes away much of the heroin craving for patients and allows them to safely detox. Unfortunately, it can only be prescribed by a limited number of special providers because of ridiculous government rules. Yet any doc can prescribe oxycontin- it makes no sense.

Now don't get me started on the stupidity of the new rules on vicodin.

Amy
 

Delta_Force

Contributing Member
I know a young man (25) that was addicted to opiates along with several other people he ran with. Oxy is be prescribed by a Dr. and one can get it with just a co pay with their insurance. There was a person that was going to several Dr.'s and getting prescriptions for the drug, had a $5 co-pay for a bottle of 30 pills, he had an unlimited supply to sell, and was pocketing $1500 for a bottle he paid $5 for. Every dime the young man had went for the pills, it even lead to stealing from his parents, taking items to the pawn shop to pay for the habit. The young man is now clean and as he said, people turn to heroin because it is a lot cheaper on the street than the $50 a pill for oxy and the heroin high last longer. And yes, he said he would do anything he needed to, to buy the prescribed pill as he knew what it was and where it came from.
 

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Orthopedic injuries are problematic because the pain in subjective. It's your word that you have the pain; there's no way to actually test you to see if you're actually in pain. Add in the tendency for building up a tolerance for the pain meds and you have a built-in increase in demand.

Doctors are under increased scrutiny; suspected of being enablers prescribing opioids willy-nilly for 'patients' that don't actually have serious pain. I can see why people who have been cut off from the opioids on which they've become dependent, serious real pain or not.

A corollary to the article is that there must be a network of heroin dealers to support the surge in heroine usage. That's creepy.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
A good accupuncture doctor can stop pain. Reroute nerves. Bring on fertility or bring on menstration. Restore speech from a stroke. Enhance the immune system to kill cancer

More people DIE from prescription drugs than die from illegal drugs every year

True story about our drug dealer docs. Stepped on a rusty nail lastmonth. Went to er for tetnus. Got a 30 day prescription for vicodan. Never got the tetnus shot since noone knows when i had one last. (Which is the only reason i went)
Told doc aspirin would be ok but He wrote prescription anyway with a lecture on his knowing i would be in pain for weeks. I tore it up when got home and Ate one aspirin and wonder just WHEN are doctors going to learn to HEAR what patients say. Am so sick of the "I am God" mentality taught to all AMA credentialed doctors.
 
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Hacker

Computer Hacking Pirate
There is a chiropractic process that will unwind all the injuries one's body has accumulated throughout one's lifetime.

It works on most people, affecting one's entire body and emotional well-being.

Only a small minority of chiropractors use it. The medical community at large would rather push pills than provide a cure - this is a cure.

http://www.meningealrelease.com/
 

RCSAR

Veteran Member
Let me tell you what is really going down.

A group thinks Hydrocodone should not be a Class 3 Controlled Substance. They want it more restricted to the Class 2 list.

Texas has made a decision to no more allow phoned in Hydrocodone. Prescriptions are now good for 3 months and not 6 AND the prescription must be hand written and presented in person and not faxed from the Dr.
 

Dux

Veteran Member
Whenever I get pain meds, I put the remainder in the freezer, for when I might really need them.
 

kytom

escapee from reality
only the addicts know why they are doing what they are doing! if one havent walked in their shoes then one cannot judge. i remember years ago someone interviewed dan rather and ask him if he ever did heroin. he said yes. he had to do a story on it and he realized that unless he experienced it he couldnt write an accurate story about it. remember judge not shall you be judged!!!
 

Delta_Force

Contributing Member
Let me tell you what is really going down.

A group thinks Hydrocodone should not be a Class 3 Controlled Substance. They want it more restricted to the Class 2 list.

Texas has made a decision to no more allow phoned in Hydrocodone. Prescriptions are now good for 3 months and not 6 AND the prescription must be hand written and presented in person and not faxed from the Dr.



It is the same in Colorado, except there are NO refills on the prescription you have to get a new hand written one every time. That is why people have several Dr.'s writing prescriptions for them.
 

Jez

Veteran Member
What really sucks is that all the paranoia over people becoming adicted to pain meds is making it more difficult for people who need them to get them. Suddenly there are a lot more hoops that you have to jump through and God forbid if you have to change doctors for some reason.

Back when my gallbladder was going out and I rotated out between the Dr, the specialist, and the ER I learned what pain killers the Er would use and I learned which ones were more effective. The problem became trying to work with the Dr without looking like a junkie looking for a fix.
 

RCSAR

Veteran Member
When the country clamps down on needed painkillers they will reap the Unintended Consequences.
 

Beebz

Senior Member
I notice that all of the articles that are referenced in this article are included in the post above except one.

Marijuana laws may reduce painkiller deaths


The version posted above:

Some countries are more willing than the United States to pursue a strategy of harm reduction -- that is, to steer addicts away from the most dangerous types of behavior. A number of countries have implemented programs that actually provide heroin to addicts; some studies (PDF) show that doing so improves addicts' health and reduces their use of other illicit drugs.

Yet in general, the U.S. strategy has not been harm reduction, but to target users and doctors.


The section in question as it appears in the article:

Some countries are more willing than the United States to pursue a strategy of harm reduction -- that is, to steer addicts away from the most dangerous types of behavior. A number of countries have implemented programs that actually provide heroin to addicts; some studies (PDF) show that doing so improves addicts' Some countries are more willing than the United States to pursue a strategy of harm reduction -- that is, to steer addicts away from the most dangerous types of behavior. A number of countries have implemented programs that actually provide heroin to addicts; some studies (PDF) show that doing so improves addicts' health and reduces their use of other illicit drugs.

Marijuana laws may reduce painkiller deaths.

Yet in general, the U.S. strategy has not been harm reduction, but to target users and doctors.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
There are plenty of non narcotic pain killers mood elevators and inflamation fighters that SHOULD be tried before narcotics. Evaluation by a physical therapist and some brace orthotics and training exercises should also be considered before masking pain symptoms with narcotics.


For medical prescription addiction there is help. Rehabs. Alternative drugs and support groups similar to AA

As for chiropractor...well they can break your back bones and crush vertebrae. Fact!!! Be careful with choosing a chiropractor
 

Hacker

Computer Hacking Pirate
There is a chiropractic process that will unwind all the injuries one's body has accumulated throughout one's lifetime.

It works on most people, affecting one's entire body and emotional well-being.

Only a small minority of chiropractors use it. The medical community at large would rather push pills than provide a cure - this is a cure.

http://www.meningealrelease.com/

Anyone who's interested in this chiro process, just PM me or check out their website. The process got me off of meds in the first two months.
 

zeker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
just went to dr aug 28.. made appt may 10. I take 3 tylenol3, per day in morning.. cant take after noon cuz they keep me awake. dr looks at 3 month presc and says "thats a lotta pills (300) maybe we will give you 1 week blister paks", I explain that 1 month of pills cost $10 and the pharmacy charge is $12 to make one presc. if he gives 1 week supply I will end up giving pharm $48/month for the same $10 worth of pills.. at the 3 month supply I only pay them $12 once every 3 months. I am on small dis for my knees/back and feet.

at first I thot he figgered I was an addict but then it came to me.. he thinks I am selling the pills. I doubt t3s will be a big seller but what do I know.. any extras get put away for storage.. preps..

I explained how I live. in a cabin in the woods without tv or running water and rarely get to town and dont socialize with people. I need the pills to help me function carrying/cutting wood and carting water etc as well as running the critters and ghardens here. I doubt he understood and will find out tues what the presc will be,
 

RCSAR

Veteran Member
One of the Unintended Consequences is groups are forming to plant hens and chick and persion white opium poppies everywhere!

They already have opium tincture and Laudnum processing. Just like the med MJ people have done to make med MJ available to sick relatives.

So ONE of your Unintended Consequences will be accidental overdoses or product not mixed to standard.

People seeking pain relief WILL find it even if it means mixing street heroin with alcohol to dose by tablespoon. It will help the patient and the caregiver no end. You want a real sucky job with no pay? Become a 24/7 caregiver for a relative with chronic pain and not enough meds to make the pain go away.

In many parts of the u.s. it is very legal to grow opium poppies. It is illegal tp process them onto opium. If you can make cookies you can process opium. Many folks get poppy heads from arts and craft stores or online for a specific strain. Once you have a harvest you will have a massive amount of seeds. They grow in the worst soil with little attention.

Thats one reason the Poppy is a symbol of WW I. After WW I opium and derivitives were given freely to families by the gov. The Vet got pain relief and the wife got hooked on the product. If she divorced her injured Vet she lost her free opium source. (trivia)
 
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SheWoff

Southern by choice
In TN for class 2 you have to get a new script every 30 days, take it to the same pharmacy to get filled. Or answer a ton of questions why you changed pharmacies. I get some of the strangest looks from the pharm techs every month. Like I don't look like I need morphine, etc... well no I don't look like I need it when I am taking it duh. It enables me to walk. period. If I didn't have it, I wouldn't walk. It's far far to painful due to diabetic neuropathy and post-stroke pain. Luckily, my doc *a prepper too* writes for me tid instead of bid so I can stash the extras in the freezer. I rotate in/out every 30 days, taking the oldest first and putting the newest in the freezer that I just got. If TSHTF, I have a good supply and also Lortab 10's to help me ease off the twice a day morphine.

If you have never been in such pain that you are unable to function, it's hell. But I have found those are usually the do gooders that are wanting to tighten down on the script writing and changing the laws.

She
 

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Back when my gallbladder was going out and I rotated out between the Dr, the specialist, and the ER I learned what pain killers the Er would use and I learned which ones were more effective. The problem became trying to work with the Dr without looking like a junkie looking for a fix.

I wish the ER doctors knew what the up-to-date pain meds were!

Now I have lots of Hydrocodone that I don't need and can't return.
 

Donald Shimoda

In Absentia
Howdy, Folks!


Hydrocodone! I know some young ladies that will do *anything* for this stuff.

I don't get it. I've been prescribed a hefty bottle of this stuff for my post surgery, and it does absolutely nothing for me to control pain.

I get more pain relief out of plain old aspirin(which I cannot take right now, as I'm still bleeding :( ).

Vicodin addicts are truly odd, IMHO. There just doesn't seem to be enough "oomph" in that stuff to get you where you need to go, but I guess for some folks, it really pushes the right buttons.

I can't stand morphine - makes me want to run a marathon.

Since I don't get anything off of this stuff:

Whenever I get pain meds, I put the remainder in the freezer, for when I might really need them.

I stockpile as well; *valuable* trade item for later, and I hold valid prescriptions for everything in my possession.

Peace and Love,

Donald Shimoda
 

Dux

Veteran Member
That is a great prepper plan.

Re: freezing meds, even if it weren't a prepper plan, the thing is when I need them, I need them. I don't like the prospect of calling a skeptical doctor in the middle of the night begging for pain relief. Last time I needed some and didn't have any was memorable. I had sliced the tip of my finger off, went to the doc who injected something, cauterized, then wrapped it. Exactly 30 minutes later (at home), the injections wore off. Holy cr@p!
 

FireDance

TB Fanatic
Problem is, an addict is an addict. They don't WANT to come off the stuff and really don't care if there are alternative way to relieve their pain. They will tell you it doesn't work (chiro) or they can't do it (PT) etc. I know. I watched my aunt growing up (was addicted to heroin) and am watching someone now who is burning down their house and ruining their life bc they are a true addict. Totally different from you and I. But ONLY for the grace of God... It's horrible to experience/watch ppl who you love do this. It's also infuriating. There is no answer for these ppl until THEY want one. Regulating drugs is just another feel good tack.
 

TBonz

Veteran Member
I have degenerative disc disease, which occasionally causes herniated discs. Ouch. Plus fibromyalgia, which makes everything else hurt. Aspirin and all that kind of pain relievers do nothing for my pain. Muscle relaxants (for fibro) literally make me sick; I must be allergic.

Once during a bad episode (herniated disc) they put me on oxycontin for a few weeks. HATED it. Never did finish that bottle. I had another painkiller once for fibro, whose name escapes me, that supposedly wasn't addictive. For me, it WAS addictive and after I figured out what was happening, I threw them away.

My painkiller of choice is Tylenol with codeine. Usually I take 2 ones, for really bad pain, a 3.

I don't get high on them and for me, they're not addictive. I am careful and only take them when I must.

People like me bitterly resent those who take drugs to get high, and the idiot government who learned NOTHING from Prohibition. I've never done drugs, not even marijuana, and just don't get the appeal. It's tiresome to have everyone think you just want drugs. It's not that way at all. For those in pain, the perfect pain pills knocks it down (or out) so you can function. Getting a buzz would be a bad thing as it gets in the way of living. If I need to get high, I can always mix a drink, which IS legal.

It's doubly annoying because other countries, like England and Canada, treat their citizens like adults. You can get codeine at the pharmacy. Why not here? You might become ADDICTED.

Anyone with a chronic pain condition doesn't give a damn about that. We just want to knock down pain so we can function. What I have can't be fixed, and no surgery or magic natural solutions will solve my spinal issues. I get to live with this 'til I die. I'm not complaining, many have it worse, but I am really tired of idiot drug addicts making it so I can't get the relief I need. It's easier as I'm aging as no one gives a damn if Grandma is addicted, it's the young ones who concern them.

And don't get a cold more than once or twice a year. You could get arrested for buying too much Sudafed.

Legalize it all and let Darwinism take its course.
 
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