Pubdate: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 Source: Times Record News (TX) Copyright: 2001 The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www.trnonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/995 Author: Trish Choate and Christina Vance, Times Record News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?186 (Oxycontin) LOCAL OXYCONTIN ABUSE FOLLOWS TREND North Texans have jumped on a rickety drug-abuse bandwagon, often with a doctor's prescription in hand, law enforcement and drug treatment officials said. The powerful drug Oxycontin, for instance, became the prescription painkiller of choice to abuse during the last year in Wichita Falls, officials said. Local Oxycontin abuse follows a nationwide trend. "The effects of the drug and the withdrawal are almost the same as heroin," said Dr. Donn Leuzinger, medical director for The Treatment Center. Leuzinger, a certified addictionologist, oversees detoxification for the drug treatment facility. Drug abusers crush time-released Oxycontin tablets, injecting the substance like heroin or inhaling it, according to an article from About.com, The Human Internet. A powerful high descends on the abuser. Oxycontin is a favorite because the time-released tablets contain larger doses than other drugs like Vicodin. The medication belongs to the drug family including Darvon, Vicodin, Dilaudid and Demerol, according to NIDA, a part of the National Institutes of Health. The painkillers cling to receptors in the brain to block pain. A Wichita Falls family practice physician is a seasoned veteran in fighting the prescription drug wars. "We're caught between two worlds," said Dr. Keith Williamson, university physician for the Vinson Health Center at Midwestern State University. "The pain management world tells you (that) you have to be very aggressive in managing pain. There are lawsuits to that effect." But abuse and diversion of prescription drugs is also a concern, Williamson said. He hasn't treated patients for chronic pain since leaving the Clinics of North Texas nine months ago for his present position. But Williamson has some not-so-fond memories. "People are very aggressive and resourceful about seeking drugs if they're addicted to pain medicine," he said. "I've had people approach me while I was doing yard work to ask me for drugs for headaches." That includes "upstanding people in the community," he said. Williamson also had to "fire" patients because he discovered they were abusing drugs such as Valium, tapping five or six doctors for pills. And prescription pads have been stolen from his office. Oxycontin requires a prescription in triplicate from a state-issued pad, he said. One copy stays in the doctor's office, one goes to the pharmacy and another to the state. The prescription is not refillable and is only good for seven days after it's issued. Physicians must have an identification number from the Drug Enforcement Agency to prescribe opioids such as Oxycontin, Williamson said. Still, drug abusers dial up pharmacies, pretending to be a physician to get a prescription, and many insurance companies have begun to require the DEA number for identification. "And your number gets spread all over," Williamson said. An official with Turning Point North Texas Council on Substance Abuse said he is receiving more calls from people dealing with addictions to Oxycontin, Vicodin and other prescription medicines. "Initially, what is happening there is that people have legitimate injuries that they receive these heavy-duty pain pills for," Steve Rueschenberg, Turning Point executive director, said. "Maybe they've hurt their back, been involved in an accident, maybe it's a work-related thing." Or a person might come at drug abuse from another direction. "People may be using or getting access to the heroin, and then when it dries up, they use the prescription pain pills," he said. Oxycontin has probably become one of the most abused prescription drugs because it's cheaper than Dialaudid, said a Wichita Falls narcotics officer who spoke on condition of anonymity. Williamson said he never had a problem controlling drugs such as Oxycontin or morphine because he knew exactly who was taking what and why. But if a person was dying of cancer, his personal philosophy was to allow them to have whatever they wanted. "On the other hand, you do have pain syndromes which defy good diagnosis and treatment that can lead to abuse patterns," Williamson said. Often terminally ill cancer patients become dealers of drugs like Oxycontin, the narcotics officer said. They sell the medications at a huge profit, possibly dealing drugs to supplement a fixed income. A tablet might cost 50 cents at the pharmacy. They sell it to a wholesale drug dealer for up to $15. Then the wholesaler charges up to $55 a tablet on the street. For the terminally ill, the question becomes, "What's more important to you, the dope or the money?" the officer said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek