Pubdate: Sun, 14 Sep 2003 Source: Sun Herald (MS) Copyright: 2003, The Sun Herald Contact: http://www.sunherald.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/432 Author: Robin Fitzgerald, The Sun Herald DRUG OVERDOSE REVEALS GROWING PROBLEM Six Deaths Involve Prescriptions Gulfport Tops List GULFPORT - Prescription drug overdoses have claimed 29 lives in Harrison County since January, compared to 46 drug overdoses in 2002. Where the overdoses occurred this year through Aug. 25: . Gulfport: 10 . Biloxi: 8 . Harrison County: 6 . Long Beach: 3 . Pass Christian: 2 Deadly Drugs Several types of controlled substances caused the recent drug overdoses reported by the Harrison County Coroner's Office, but oxycodone remains the deadliest prescription drug in the state. Some of the drugs, what they're for, and their brand names: . Alprazolam: An anti-anxiety medication also sold as Xanax. . Hydrocodone: A pain reliever considered as potent as oral morphine and also used to control coughing. Also sold as Lortab, Lorcet, Tussionex, Tylox, Vicodin, Vicoprofen, Anexsia, Hycodan and Hycomine. . Methadone: A pain reliever also used to treat heroin addicts. Also sold as Dolophine, Methadose and Amidone. . Oxycodone: A time-released pain reliever for severe pain, often given to cancer patients. Brand names include OxyContin and OxyIR, but it's also in combination products such as Percodan and Percocet. . Soma: A muscle relaxer. [source] - Drug Enforcement Administration By the Numbers . 525 drug arrests in Harrison County last fiscal year by the state Bureau of Narcotics ranks the county as having the highest number of drug arrests statewide for at least three consecutive years. . About 12 percent of drug arrests statewide by MBN agents last fiscal year involved prescription drugs, along with heroin, LSD and MDMA, also known as ecstasy. . Nine Mississippi doctors investigated by DEA last year were asked to surrender their licenses. Since January, DEA has asked another six doctors. . 51 complaints investigated by the State Medical Licensure Board in the past fiscal year resulted in disciplinary action against two doctors, one pending case on appeal and eight doctors asked to surrender their licenses. . 300 is the average number of complaints against doctors received each year by the State Medical Licensure Board, which is one of three licensing agencies. The other agencies that license doctors are the DEA and the State Board of Pharmacy. For at least two years, Jared Bishop of Gulfport routinely visited a Houston doctor who kept him supplied with prescriptions for methadone and generic Xanax, drugs his family doesn't believe he needed. Then the side effects snowballed. The 23-year-old hotel bellman lost his job and moved into his parents' home with his toddler. Money and family belongings began to disappear. He became a different person. In May, his temper led to a domestic violence conviction and a court order to attend anger-management classes. His mother, Susan Bishop, said she hoped his brush with the law would force him to realize he needed help. "He denied having a drug problem and he wouldn't listen to us," she said. Jared Bishop died of an unintentional overdose Aug. 23, a day after he picked up another round of prescriptions. He is one of six Harrison County residents who died of a prescription drug overdose in a recent two-week period. Four of the six deaths involved methadone, a medication so powerful and addictive that it's considered a controlled substance, said Harrison County Coroner Gary Hargrove. Bishop's death brings to 29 the number of drug-related deaths countywide from January through August. Last year, drugs killed 46 people in Harrison County and 31 people in Jackson County. The growing death toll raises concerns about the dangers associated with controlled substances and how easy it is for people to get them. In Bishop's case, his family believes he lied about symptoms to get the prescriptions. He died unintentionally after taking too much methadone and alprazolam, also sold as Xanax. Either drug can be deadly, but the combination increases the risk, said Harrison County Coroner Gary Hargrove. According to DEA, Mississippi has a major problem with people stealing controlled substances from pharmacies or hospitals, buying them illegally from others, altering prescriptions to increase the quantity or going "doctor shopping," which means visiting several doctors to get multiple prescriptions. Unscrupulous doctors are more commonly found in larger cities such as New Orleans, Mobile and Houston, Gulfport Police Capt. Pat Pope said. However, "I'm not saying we don't have dirty doctors, but they are few and far between. "But once the word gets out that a doctor has given the pills that somebody wants, it's like a bear attracted to honey. Addicts have an intelligence network of their own." Authorities have heard that some doctors even ask patients to slip $25 in cash in an envelope for a legal defense fund. Or the doctor sets up shop, opening his doors only at night and suddenly leaves town. "Regardless of where you go, you're always going to find a doctor who's simply there to make money from drug abusers," said DEA Agent Ed Dickey. About 98 percent of the state's doctors want to do the right thing by prescribing the proper drugs when patients describe symptoms that can be improved by those drugs, said W.J. Burnett, director of the state Medical Licensure Board. "A big problem we face is that there's no central database set up on doctors and patients who may be drug-seekers," Burnett said. In a pending case, a white-collar professional in Jackson visited 64 doctors for the same prescription and none of the doctors knew about the others, Burnett said. The board's eight investigators spend 65 percent of their time visiting pharmacies to identify drug-seekers. DEA and MBN also have agents who specialize in prescription drug problems. But even if a doctor suspects a patient has a drug problem, the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, prohibits him from discussing a patient's case with family members without permission. "Nine out of 10 times, people who are hooked on drugs aren't going to openly admit it or go for help," Hargrove said. "Family members, school officials and employers can choose to ignore the symptoms. But if they do, death's going to be the result." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake