Pubdate: Thu, 07 Jun 2001 Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Copyright: 2001 Richmond Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.timesdispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/365 Author: Maria Sanminiatelli, Associated Press PAINKILLER ABUSE SPREADING THROUGHOUT VIRGINIA, POLICE SAY RICHMOND, Va. - Abuse of the painkiller OxyContin, which was mainly restricted to southwest Virginia, is spreading to more populated parts of the state, officials said Wednesday. ``What we're finding is that northern Virginia, central Virginia and eastern Virginia are all having a problem with it,'' said State Police 1st Sgt. Rod Bess, a supervisor with the department's Drug Diversion Unit. Although the numbers remain low, Bess said the abuse is more widespread than originally thought. ``Right now it's like an iceberg, and we're just seeing the tip,'' he said. From January 2000 to March 2001, State Police received at least 260 complaints of abuse of oxycodone _ the pill's main ingredient _ from northern, central and eastern Virginia. That amounts to about 15 percent of all drug complaints for the region, compared with less than 10 percent before 2000, Bess estimated. When used properly, oxycodone is released slowly in the system to treat chronic pain in cancer patients and those with arthritis and back pain. Abusers grind the tablets into powder and swallow, snort or inject the drug to produce effects similar to heroin, said State Police 1st Sgt. Landon Gibbs. Since 1998, OxyContin was linked to at least 43 deaths in southwest Virginia and at least 59 deaths in Kentucky's mountain region. But data provided by the medical examiner's office shows that other parts of Virginia also have been witnessing and increase in oxycodone-related deaths. In 1998, one person from central Virginia and one in the Tidewater area overdosed on oxycodone. The next year, the numbers jumped to three deaths in central Virginia and six in northern Virginia. There were no such deaths reported in the Tidewater area. In 2000, five people in central Virginia, eight in northern Virginia and five in the Tidewater region overdosed on the drug. In the first three months of 2001, three people in central Virginia and one in the Tidewater area died. Gibbs said OxyContin abuse started in economically depressed areas, where people with insurance or Medicaid can get the pills for free. But now, the drug has crossed economic boundaries. ``We're seeing other folks too who are using, middle class people,'' Bess said. ``Once ... the media let everybody know about it, it really caught on.'' Gibbs said the painkiller is popular in part because it is considered a safe drug by abusers. ``It's not cut with rat poison or other things, and you're buying it from a reliable source: your pharmacist,'' Gibbs said. Abusers generally obtain the pills by lying to doctors about being in pain and getting a prescription, or by buying them on the street for about $1 per milligram. ``In many cases, doctors are unaware that the patient is an abuser,'' Gibbs said. The pill's manufacturer, Purdue Pharma, said last month it was suspending distribution of the 160-milligram tablets to curb abuse. Investigators started cracking down on doctors who prescribe the drug illegally. In southwest Virginia, four doctors were convicted, and another goes to trial this month on charges ranging from illegal distribution of drugs to health care fraud, Gibbs said. Purdue Pharma has also mailed educational brochures to doctors and pharmacists, and is distributing special prescription pads to doctors, making it more difficult to forge prescriptions. A task force of police, prosecutors and medical professionals in Virginia is studying ways to combat the drug's abuse. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek