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Accidental addicts: Local, state and federal officials are taking action to reduce drug abuse deaths caused overwhelmingly by MD-prescribed pain meds

From SpotlightNews.com
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<<On Thursday, June 2, an official toxicology report released by the Midwest Medical Examiners Office revealed that the 57-year-old artist Prince died at his home in Minnesota last April of an accidental opiate overdose—making the iconic music legend perhaps the most recognizable victim in a tidal wave of opioid abuse and overdose that experts are calling one of the worst public health epidemics this country has ever seen. Across the state and the country, officials and agencies from all levels of government are working to stem the rising tide of opiate-related deaths, which have increased by nearly 50 percent over the last five years.

On the same Thursday, federal “drug czar,” Michael Botticelli, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, led a forum at the Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences on the opioid crisis ravaging both the Capital District and the nation. Together with Lt. Governor of New York Kathy Hochul and U.S. Representative Paul Tonko (NY-20), Botticelli — a Troy native and graduate of Siena College — and New York’s Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services Commissioner Arlene Gonzalez-Sanchez made the case for increased funding for prevention and treatment, and explained what makes this particular drug epidemic so different — and, in a way, much more tragic.

“Eighty percent of people addicted to opiates started with a legally prescribed prescription,” said Hochul, remarking that her own teenaged children were prescribed a 30-day supply of the painkiller Hydrocodone when they had their wisdom teeth removed. “When I had my wisdom teeth out,” she said, “I was told to take a couple of aspirin and go to bed. But now there’s this whole culture that started about 15 years ago with doctors who were told they now have a product which will eliminate pain from their patients, but were not aware that they’re inadvertently creating a whole generation of people addicted to this stuff.” Doctors, she said, who were not properly warned by the pharmaceutical providers or not properly trained in the prescription and monitoring of the highly addictive drugs, are beginning to take notice of the longer-term effects of the medications that they have been prescribing, “and we’re starting to see a change in that attitude.”

“There are a lot of people who are not intentional addicts, they’re accidental addicts,” said Hochul. “That is a key difference between the drugs crisis in the ‘60s and ‘70s and what we’re seeing now. People are listening to their doctors, following their doctors advice and ending up addicted.”

“This opioid crisis can be tracked back to the overprescribing of pain medications,” said Botticelli. “We know that four out of five newer heroin users started by misusing prescription pain medication. So this is not an epidemic that started with heroin, it started with prescription pain medication. And, unfortunately, our drug traffickers took advantage of a lucrative market of people who are addicted to pain medications.”

Heroin, he noted, has become a much cheaper alternative to expensive pain medications, some of which can cost $40 a pill. “And the purity levels that we see with heroin now are higher.

“We have also seen a dramatic increase in illicit fentanyl, a synthetic opioid which is many, many times more powerful than heroin,” said Botticelli. “Sometimes, unknowingly, people who are addicted to heroin are getting heroin laced with fentanyl — or sometimes just straight fentanyl — and we’re seeing significant overdose increases across the country from people who are overdosing on fentanyl-laced heroin.” (According to the autopsy report released earlier that day, Prince’s death was the result of a self-administered fentanyl overdose. While it was unclear how the late artist obtained the drugs, CNN reported that an attorney for Prince’s half-siblings revealed that the singer had an addiction to Percocet decades before he died, and that the artist started using the drug to help him deal with the rigors of performing, and not for recreational use.)

“I don’t know what the outcome is going to be,” said Botticelli. “But, we have too many tragic deaths as it relates to the opioid epidemic. And, the preliminary data for 2014 shows that has dramatically increased yet again.” State and federal proposals to address the epidemic, he noted, will not be sufficient without more funding for treatment.

“This is the reality,” said Gonzalez-Sánchez. “We really need to start looking at those numbers and what they mean.” After listing a series of aggressive reforms undertaken by New York state already — the signing of an historic package of bills to combat heroin; the expansion of insurance coverage for substance use disorder treatment; increased access to care and enhanced treatment capacity across the state, including a major expansion of medication-assisted treatment; the expansion of recovery and peer support services; the launch of an anti-stigma public education awareness campaign; and the development of departmental best practices to deal with prevention strategies — she concluded that, “the problem is still persisting.”

Noting that, last month, Gov. Andrew Cuomo created an action-oriented task force, headed by Hochul, which has been tasked with devising a list of actionable items, including regulatory and policy changes that will be brought forth for action before the end of the session, Gonzalez-Sanchez said, “We cannot do this alone. We need federal government’s support and partnership, but we also need to support our federal partners in their efforts to obtain more funding.

“As you have heard,” she continued, “the president has called on Congress to pass $1.1 billion in new funding to be sure that every individual with an opiate addiction gets the treatment that they need in real time, not after waiting for months or weeks. But we also know that this needs funding attached to it, so we need to garner support for this plan to pass so that we can build and expand on what we have already developed.”>>