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DrugBuyersAdministrator
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OxyContin doesn't cause addiction. Its abusers are already..
      #217614 - 01/22/05 02:56 PM

http://www.forbes.com/business/forbes/2004/0906/048.html

Quote:


OxyContin doesn't cause addiction. Its abusers are already addicts.
Users and Abusers
Among recreational OxyContin users, percent who have used other drugs.
"Pain Pill leaves death trail." This lurid headline kicked off the Orlando Sentinel's series on OxyContin, a narcotic painkiller. According to the five-day, front page exposé, published last fall, 205 overdose deaths in Florida in 2001 and 2002 were linked to OxyContin. What's more, many of the victims were innocent patients, taking the medication for pain. They "put their faith in their doctors," said the Sentinel, "and ended up dead, or broken." The Sentinel's reporting galvanized Florida politicians. Governor Jeb Bush called for a computerized system to track prescribing of addictive medications. Last winter a Florida congressman and state legislators each held hearings.

In August the Sentinel recanted: Its OxyContin series was terribly wrong. Autopsies on two-thirds of the victims uncovered other drugs (e.g., alcohol, heroin, other painkillers) that alone or in combination with oxycodone could have been fatal. (Oxycodone, the active ingredient in OxyContin, has been available for more than 60 years.)

Of the remaining one-third, no one could tell how often OxyContin itself was involved because name-brand drugs were not identified in the autopsies. Only oxycodone is listed, and that compound is also found in Percocet, Percodan and Tylox, which are also abused.

The Sentinel had alreadyconceded in a February story that its series falsely portrayed "accidental addict" David Rokisky, 36, a former policeman. Before his use of OxyContin he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine in 1999. His attorney had told the Albuquerque Journal that Rokisky "had problems" with cocaine and steroids.

These two errors--that people are overdosing on OxyContin in huge numbers and that the typical OxyContin addict starts out as a pain patient who falls unwittingly into a drug habit--reflect common misconceptions.

Like all narcotics, OxyContin can be abused, but its virtue is its powerful effect on persistent moderate-to-severe pain. It is not intended for toothaches; it is for unremitting pain from diseases like cancer, neurological illness and deforming rheumatoid arthritis.

Available since 1996, OxyContin is now the most widely prescribed branded narcotic for serious pain. Last year 7.7 million prescriptions were dispensed, generating $1.6 billion in revenue for the drug's maker, Purdue Pharma in Stamford, Conn. Its popularity is due to the fact that it is taken only twice a day. Other narcotic painkillers have to be taken every 3 to 6 hours. The 12-hour controlled delivery keeps blood levels steady, an important feature when pain is constant and severe. The name OxyContin, in fact, is from oxycodone and continuous. And it is strong. For comparison: The strongest dose of a single Percocet pill contains 10 milligrams of oxycodone (plus acetaminophen), while OxyContin (which is pure oxycodone) has up to 80mg per pill.

Problems arise when the pill is crushed or chewed (thereby destroying the slow-release feature) and people snort or inject the contents for a euphoric rush similar to that delivered by heroin. Not surprisingly, the typical OxyContin abuser already has current or prior substance abuse problems. In other words, he is someone who seeks out the pill precisely because it can produce a spectacular high when crushed.

This has given the medication a serious image problem. A month before the Sentinel series appeared, the New York Times cited a member of a Food & Drug Administration advisory panel as pronouncing OxyContin to be responsible for 500 to 1,000 deaths a year, an estimate that has no basis in fact.

Yes, there are problems. Some doctors hand it out liberally, and there are cities where OxyContin is relatively easy to buy on the street. But in those regions drug abuse is not a new scourge. For example, Kentucky's 2001 drug-abuse raid, called Operation OxyFest, resulted in the arrest of 207 people. But in 1992 (before OxyContin even existed) another statewide sweep of illegal drugs resulted in 543 arrests. There were 27 oxycodone-related deaths in 2000 in Kentucky. In all but 2, however, additional drugs, including cocaine, heroin, other prescription painkillers and alcohol, were found in the bodies.

The Kentucky picture reflects a national trend. In 2003 the Journal of Analytical Toxicology reported on deaths related to oxycodone in 23 states over 29 months. In only 12 of the 919 drug-abuse deaths (1.3%) was OxyContin found alone.

In December 2003 the General Accounting Office summed up its investigation on OxyContin: "While Drug Enforcement Administration field offices continue to report OxyContin as a drug of choice among abusers, [it] has not been and is not now considered the most highly abused and diverted prescription drug nationally." That distinction goes to hydrocodone.

Yet OxyContin's maker is taking heat. To date, more than 300 suits have been brought against Purdue Pharma for failing to warn consumers of the risk of addiction. "They are corporate drug lords," says the lawyer representing a group of Virginia residents.

Such resentment may be part of the overall animus toward OxyContin. After all, it fits the popular cultural narrative that frames pharmaceutical companies as rapacious, self-interested entities that hurt consumers--sick, vulnerable consumers to boot. Add trial lawyers salivating at the thought of a product liability payday, and media that cannot resist the story of a villain (drug company) and a fair maiden (patient), and you have the script for a modern-day health scare.

The most worrisome consequence of the hype about OxyContin's dangers is that patients, and some doctors, have become fearful of it. The American Pain Foundation receives calls from patients who are doing well on the medication but are afraid to continue even though it is well established that addiction--the compulsive use of a drug to regulate one's mood--occurs infrequently among individuals who take OxyContin as prescribed.

The problem isn't OxyContin itself, but its deliberate misuse. The Sentinel apologized for having "created the misleading impression that most oxycodone overdoses resulted from patients' taking the drug to relieve pain from medical conditions." That misimpression has caused a lot of unnecessary pain.





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JethroBodine
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Reged: 06/20/03
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Re: OxyContin doesn't cause addiction. Its abusers are alrea [Re: DrugBuyers]
      #217702 - 01/22/05 09:25 PM

""addiction--the compulsive use of a drug to regulate one's mood--""

That's a definition I have never heard. I suppose users of antidepressants must be addicts because they use a drug to regulate their moods.

Pain adversly affects my mood, and pain meds improve that condition, so, I guess I'm an addict also.

--------------------
?????????????????????????????????????????
If you can't do it for me; If you won't
even do it for yourself; PLEASE do it for
the sake of the giant three toed sloth!


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toe
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Reged: 10/09/02
Posts: 1492
Loc: MidWest USA
Re: OxyContin doesn't cause addiction. Its abusers are alrea [Re: JethroBodine]
      #223737 - 02/09/05 09:22 PM

Quote:

""addiction--the compulsive use of a drug to regulate one's mood--""

That's a definition I have never heard. I suppose users of antidepressants must be addicts because they use a drug to regulate their moods.






Yup. My shrinks have always hated it when I wasn't properly addicted to my prozac, imipramine, lithium, zoloft, buspar, trazadone, neurontin, lamictal, remeron, effexor, lexapro, zyprexa, seroquel, topamax, wellbutrin, geodon. . .

--------------------
"It's the end of the World as We Know it. . ."
-REM "and I'm seeking asylum in Canada"-toe


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prettyday
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Reged: 02/09/03
Posts: 1106
Loc: Coastal Sage Scrub
Re: OxyContin doesn't cause addiction. Its abusers are alrea [Re: toe]
      #223749 - 02/09/05 10:17 PM

Thank You Toe, and Mr. Bodine, I'll join that club too.

I have been here a while; I am certain that most of you could tell me quicker than I could tell myself when I was lying to myself; but I will be honest about this.

Purdue is one deceitful company.
I have written so many posts on this, my keyboard will probably grow little hands and reach and strangle me, if I go at it again, but Purdue...they got away with something there, and now, if anyone wonders why we are suffering the lack of doctors who will prescribe, pain clinics, etc., maybe you'd like to come with me whilst we search for the private island chain I am certain Purdue has bought with its deceptive practices.
Yes, deceptive.
Yes, I was taking Vicodin before, at the time, I was switched over. But No, I didn't know enough to do the math that this would skyrocket my tolerance at the time. Now I do, and its a lesson I don't need to learn twice, but the first time almost killed me, when my doc got closed down and I had to simply not have it. My records and every one else at his office, were suddenly untouchable. Thousands of dollars worth of records and tests...I love how lawmakers, Mr. Stumbo, Mr. Dietl, don't mention that little side-effect.

I am not a chemist. But I have the sneaking suspicion that Purdue found another chemical (don't even know the term) signature, equation for heroin, or very strong morphine, and called it Oxycontin, then to get it past the FDA, claimed it lasted 12 hours. If it lasted 12 hours, it was for a lucky few.
It's the same with Duragesic...I know the difference between feeling a little "happy", feeling happy because my pain is reduced, and being in pain...and that third day on Duragesic is all pain, for me. Oxycontin also was marketed as this wonder for hours and hours. No, not for everyone.

To get back on topic, Oxycontin is a great med; it works wonderfully for so many people; and I think Ms Contin works even better in some cases;

But Purdue WAS greedy and they did not care about us; they made claims their meds could not stand up to, then called us the odd ones out when we did not find relief.

Shame on them.

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First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.

- Mahatma Gandhi



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