Pubdate: Thu, 02 Aug 2001 Source: News-Sentinel (IN) Copyright: 2001 The News-Sentinel Contact: http://www.fortwayne.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1077 Author: Leo Morris for the editorial board OXYCONTIN SHOWS DILEMMA OF LIBERTY What do we do when something intended for good is misused? It might be an exaggeration to call OxyContin a miracle drug. But it is certainly seen as a godsend to cancer patients and others with chronic, debilitating pain. Because the medication is powerful and time-released, those taking it can have 12 hours of smooth, pain-free existence instead of the sharp high of relief followed rather quickly by the return of pain. And just by taking two pills 12 hours apart, they can have a pain-free day and a better night's sleep. It also might be too strong to call abuse of the medication the nation's worst drug problem since crack cocaine, but not by much. Abusers crush the pills to destroy the time-release coating and unleash the drug's full power, then snort it like cocaine or mix it with water and inject it like heroin. There have been scores of overdose deaths. Small towns in Appalachia and elsewhere that have never especially had drug problems have been devastated. Even here in Fort Wayne, there have been numerous drugstore robberies in which OxyContin was the main target. There is predictable chaos. Some drugstores now refuse to carry the drug, and some doctors won't prescribe it. The drug's manufacturer, Purdue Pharma, has been sued by people in several states who say the company, among other things, aggressively pushes doctors to overprescribe the medication because it wants to fatten its bottom line so. There are increasing calls to just yank the drug and be done with the problem. That's the same kind of ethical dilemma we've faced often in this country, over guns and cars and other medications and products of all kinds. Something with the potential for good -- indeed, designed for good purposes - -- is used for evil, and people get hurt or killed who shouldn't. Do we try to prevent the abuse and deny people benefits the product offers those in need? Or do we keep the product for its obvious benefits and condemn a certain number of people to misery? It's never an easy, black-and-white decision, or at least it shouldn't be. We have always tried, in this country, to balance interests. And there are always other parties involved besides the main players we concentrate on. Drug manufacturers, for example, do make a tremendous amount of money -- more than the illegal pushers make -- for their products. And some doctors have tended to resort to medication as a treatment of first resort. That's why some communities are trying to find ways to address the OxyContin dilemma. A town in Virginia, for example, is using a fingerprint system to keep track of people who receive the drug. This is nothing new -- that's why there are drunken-driving laws and why communities experiment with gun control. We want to keep the things we need but prevent, as much as we can, their misuse. It's the dilemma of liberty. We cherish the notion -- and we should -- of living in a country that provides us the maximum freedom to control our own lives. But that same freedom unleashes those whose judgments are not always sound or whose instincts are not the most honorable. We have to accept that as well. The bottom line is that we are still moral creatures whose actions have consequences, and we must all accept responsibility for those actions. If society ever demands less, we will have not just misery but ruin. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth