Pubdate: Sun, 27 May 2001 Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2001 Orlando Sentinel Contact: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/325 Author: Doris Bloodsworth Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?186 (Oxycontin) DOSE OF DEATH: PAIN PILLS The No. 1 killer drugs in Florida are not cocaine, heroin or Ecstasy. They are powerful new versions of oxycodone and hydrocodone, painkillers that state officials began tracking only this past July. State records show that these twin synthetic forms of opium killed 152 people from July to December last year. That compares with 129 deaths attributed to cocaine and 25 tied to Ecstasy in the same time period. Nearly one out of three of those fatalities occurred in Central Florida. And as was true in the rest of the state, many of the dead were middle-aged professionals who got their first doses of the painkillers legally from their doctors. Sold under the brand names OxyContin, Vicodin, Lortabs, Percodan and Percocet, these narcotics have put a different face on drug abuse. "Executives, cops, doctors, pharmacists, lawyers -- I've arrested them all," Orlando police Detective Lloyd Randolph said. Many addicts say they started taking the pills after a back injury or oral surgery. And although painkillers have been around for years, Randolph said he has seen a definite increase in addicts in the past year. He gets 10 to 15 calls a week from pharmacies and doctors reporting people hooked on oxycodone and hydrocodone. "It's like somebody opened Pandora's box, and it's running rampant now," he said. Available records show that of the 46 men in Central Florida who died from these narcotics, 30 were ages 35 to 50. Only eight Central Florida women died. Drugmaker takes action Randolph recalls one Orlando veterinarian who was arrested after taking hundreds of hydrocodone tablets daily. The vet supplied himself through prescriptions written under the names of his patients' pets. Two weeks ago, OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma of Stamford, Conn., suspended distribution of its largest-dose 160-milligram tablets, prompted by reports of more than 120 deaths nationwide tied to its time-release form of oxycodone. "We've developed a 10-point plan to try and curb illegal use," company spokesman James Heins said. "Meanwhile, we felt it was prudent to take it off the market." That powerful dose of OxyContin has become the drug of choice for many addicts who crush the tablets and snort them, which produces an intense euphoria that can prove fatal. A Lake Mary man knows about the problem first-hand. Six years ago, Philip was making good money installing car-stereo systems. He and his wife divided their time between their South Florida home and visits to his parents in Central Florida. Then he hurt his back at work and a doctor prescribed the painkiller Vicodin. Philip, who had never had a problem with alcohol or drugs, became hooked. Before long, he was playing one doctor off another to get more drugs, until he was taking as many as 80 painkillers a day. Eventually, at the suggestion of a street dealer, he started using heroin. "It's definitely a different kind of addiction," said Philip, who asked that his last name not be used to protect his family and livelihood. "The fact that it starts out legal, someone gives you a 'permission slip' and your insurance pays for it, makes it easy." Although no figures exist to show how many people nationally are hooked on oxycodone and hydrocodone, an estimated 9 million people used prescription drugs for nonmedical reasons in 1999. Philip, 30, now is working hard to regain his life, having just completed a 11/2-year program at a methadone clinic. "I feel like I've lost so much," he said. "It's terrible to see the kind of destruction I've caused." Jody Scott, clinical director at the Center for Drug Free Living in Orlando, called oxycodone and hydrocodone the "painkillers du jour." Of the center's roughly 180 methadone clients, about a third are prescription-drug abusers, she said. Addicts Have Strategies Randolph, who advises police agencies around the state about prescription-drug enforcement, said catching the abusers is difficult. Addicts use several strategies, including stealing prescription pads, making copies of legitimate prescriptions or creating their own prescriptions on home computers. Most pharmacy chains don't have the databases to sound an alarm if the same patient is getting narcotics from more than one of their stores, Randolph said. Dr. Dev Chacko, chairman of Florida Hospital's psychiatric department, said many of the addicts he treats say they have no difficulty getting dozens of pills by juggling doctors, often in different cities. One drug counselor said that while some doctors are "stingy" with prescriptions for pain pills, "others write them like it was candy." Ross Frazier, a spokesman for the American Medical Association in Chicago, said the organization does not yet have an official policy responding to the oxycodone and hydrocodone problem. "Pain-medicine abuse is not coming from people who get them legitimately," he said. "Most are getting them illegally." A mini-crime wave has flourished in Central Florida to support the growing demand for these drugs. Brevard County authorities recently charged three men with a string of pharmacy robberies in which painkillers were taken at gunpoint. Deputies found two bottles of OxyContin when they searched the suspects. Two University of Florida students will go in front of a judge June 4 to face manslaughter charges over the death of classmate Matthew Kaminer. Authorities said Ying Che Lo, 19, stole OxyContin from the drugstore where he worked. He gave one of the tablets to his roommate, Naeem Diamond Lakhani, 19, who in turn gave it to Kaminer, police said. The 18-year-old took the pill along with a few drinks, and he died the next day. 4 Doctors, 6 Pharmacies Philip knew all the tricks. At one time, he was going to four doctors and six pharmacies, while he hid the addiction from his wife. He secretly kept his drugs at work. At day's end, he would take enough pills to get him through the night, then pray he wouldn't throw up and go into withdrawal. On the occasions when his wife found pills in his pockets, he would promise to kick the habit. He tried a detox clinic. But within days, he was forging prescriptions and buying painkillers on the street. That's when his dealer suggested using heroin instead. "I couldn't afford to buy enough pills," said Philip, who explained the cost ate through his salary in no time. The current street-level price for OxyContin has zoomed to $40 to $65 a pill, police said. Legally, these same pills can cost anywhere from less than a dollar for the least powerful to about $8 a pill for the stronger varieties. But Philip had other problems. With prescription pills, he had some control. At the height of his addiction, 10 pills would last four hours. It was "easy math," he said. But heroin sent him into a haze. There was no fooling co-workers or his family. He realized he would have to make radical changes or die. He left his job and his wife and moved into his mother's Windermere home. He entered the Center for Drug Free Living's methadone treatment program and started climbing out of his drug-induced hell. Today, he's clean, back at work and reunited with his wife. Philip hopes his story will alert others who don't realize they could be traveling down a deadly path. Randolph, the police detective, shares the same concern. "It's a sleeping giant," Randolph said. "People don't realize it can kill them." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager