Pubdate: Fri, 14 Nov 2003 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2003 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Author: Tara Tuckwiller, Staff Writer Cited: Coalition on Appalachian Substance Abuse Policy http://www.appalachiancoalition.com/ APPALACHIA TARGETS PAINKILLER ABUSE Summit Calls for Campaign to Seek Federal Aid to Fight Epidemic PIPESTEM - Drunken driving is almost a thing of the past in eastern Kentucky's Martin County. Of 27 recent DUIs there, only three were alcohol-related. In the other 24, the drivers had been "pillin.'" John Voskhul, who works on prescription drug abuse coverage at the Lexington Herald-Leader, used that anecdote to illustrate the enormity of the problem in Appalachia. He spoke at a summit Wednesday for the Coalition on Appalachian Substance Abuse Policy, which brings together doctors, policymakers, journalists and people who counsel and treat drug addicts in West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee. The summit, funded by the Appalachian Regional Commission, continued Thursday at Pipestem State Park. One of its main goals was to figure out how to get the federal government to pay more attention to Appalachia's painkiller abuse epidemic. "Individually, within our states, we're not going to pull all the weight that we need to," said Bruce Behringer, a rural health expert at East Tennessee State University and an adviser to the Appalachian Regional Commission. "We need to get our fair share. The federal government's spending an awful lot of money on this," treating prescription drug addicts and battling abuse. "How much of it's coming here?" Each state and sub-region has its own pattern of prescription drug abuse, presenters from different parts of Appalachia demonstrated. In some areas, Oxycontin abuse still rages. In others, it's Lortab. In some areas - including West Virginia - a drug used to wean opioid abusers, methadone, is starting to hit the streets and cause overdose deaths itself. "Why is it happening here? 'Cause y'all don't matter in Washington," said Susan Rook, former host of CNN's TalkBack Live. Rook became an advocate for drug recovery after recovering from drug addiction herself. "You can't approach it the way you're approaching it - 'Help us because we deserve it,'" she told the assembled Appalachians. "Lawsuits work. Political activism works. Take a bunch of coffins up to Washington, D.C., and dump 'em on the Capitol steps. Raise hell." Why has prescription drug abuse hit Appalachia so hard? Several theories have been floated - high unemployment, low education, a large disabled population that need pain medication. Brenda Hughes, who works with drug-addicted women in the mountains of eastern Kentucky, offered another explanation: Drug abuse is related to another problem that plagues high-poverty areas, domestic violence. "My typical client was born into a family in which one or more parents abused substances - alcohol, or usually other drugs," said Hughes, director of trauma programs at the Kentucky River Community Care mental health center. "She'll tell me, 'Well, when daddy was drunk when we were growing up, sometimes he'd beat on me. ... Sometimes he would shoot at us. I think he liked to see us kids run and scream. " 'I was scared to death,' she'll say. 'All the time. All the time. I thought I was going to die every day. I thought we were all going to die.'" Hughes' typical client was often raped, too. All that repeated trauma causes certain brain reactions. And guess what, Hughes said. "Those same neurocircuits in the brain ... also respond to drugs. It's the same circuit. She has found a drug to relieve her stress." Often, the patient has been in a relationship with an abusive man. She goes to a doctor, perhaps for broken bones. The doctor usually doesn't put two and two together and come up with domestic violence, Hughes said. But often, the doctor notices something else wrong with the patient: depression. "She's usually prescribed benzos and opioids," two classes of prescription drugs often abused in Appalachia. "She comes to rely on her nerve pills and pain pills to get through the day." If this woman wants to get clean, where does she go? Well, she could go to a center like Hughes'. But there's only one in Hughes' whole eight-county region of eastern Kentucky, and it "can only accommodate about 100 women at its current funding level." Almost 2,300 women in that eight-county region are substance-addicted, and could use a center like Hughes', according to estimates based on national averages (because few figures are available for Appalachia, Hughes said). "We don't like looking at our underbelly. No, we don't. But until we do, until we say this is the problem," drug abuse solutions in Appalachia will stay under-funded, Hughes said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake