Pubdate: 09 Apr 2001 Source: Kingsport Times-News (TN) Copyright: 2001 Kingsport Publishing Corporation Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1437 Website: http://www.timesnews.net/index.cgi Author: Bill P. Brooks OXYCONTIN ABUSE Oxycontin abuse is a crippling disease. I say disease because that is exactly what any type of drug addiction/alcoholism is, and all too many times we hear and see about the problem, but we never hear what can be done about it. The majority say lock them up or put them away, but we all know that does not solve the problem. Incarceration, nine out of 10 times, only worsens the problem, because the person is so hell-bent on getting over the stresses of jail, they immediately turn back to drugs or as the norm is today, Oxycontin. Being a former addict, I know the first-hand problems associated with the mental and physical dependence one suffers with Oxycontin abuse. At first, it seems like it is nothing any different from any other narcotic painkillers, but after it gets in your system sufficiently, you are hooked. I was an Oxycontin abuser for three years and it took me and my family on a downward spiral I would wish on no one on this earth. It will lead to theft, bad checks, jail, and ultimately, death. I finally was led to a treatment center in March 2000 that ended that terrible slide. It was the DRD Knoxville Medical Clinic or the methadone clinic as most refer to it. Although I realize methadone is controversial, I know that God's saving grace led me to try this treatment. Many people argue that you'll just end up being hooked on methadone or as many put it, trading one habit for another. Methadone takes away craving and withdrawal symptoms, and when they are ready to step down off the treatment, allowing the person to trade a lifestyle for one which will take them back to a normal life. Our local governments need to come together and look into methadone treatment as a deterrent to incarceration to help people who normally would not commit these crimes we are seeing to obtain Oxycontin. Bill P. Brooks Pennington Gap, Va.