Pubdate: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 2004 Roanoke Times Contact: http://www.roanoke.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/368 Author: Laurence Hammack Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) ARE DRUG DEATHS DECREASING? Through mid-August, 136 people in Western Virginia had died of overdoses, according to the state medical examiner's office. The number of fatal drug overdoses in Western Virginia, which has increased precipitously in recent years to surpass those in the more populous areas of the state, appears to be leveling off this year. Through mid-August, 136 people in the region had died of overdoses, mostly from prescription drugs such as methadone, hydrocodone and oxycodone, according to Dr. William Massello of the state medical examiner's office. Last year's total was 223. Because it takes three to four months for laboratory tests to confirm a drug overdose, this year's total will not be known for some time. But based on the numbers through August, and the autopsies done since then that indicate probable overdoses, Massello said he does not expect an increase in 2004. "I think for the first time in about seven years we're actually going to have a small drop in the numbers," he said. But it will take more than a small drop to ease what Massello has called an epidemic of prescription drug abuse. Fatal overdoses have claimed more victims per capita in the mountains and valleys of Western Virginia than on the streets of urban areas such as Richmond and Norfolk. With just 20 percent of the state's population, Western Virginia last year accounted for 41 percent of the fatal overdoses statewide. "Overdose drug deaths are a big problem in Southwest Virginia. Why, we don't know, but it's got to be related to addiction," said Dr. Molly O'Dell, director of the Alleghany Health District. With residents of rural areas seemingly more inclined to abuse prescription drugs, addicts have found an increased supply as the medical community has begun to treat pain more aggressively with opioids and other painkillers. Continuing a trend that began several years ago, methadone is the region's deadliest drug. The synthetic narcotic - prescribed by doctors as a painkiller and also used to treat drug addicts at methadone clinics - was involved in 50 overdoses through the first eight months of 2004, Massello said. Hydrocodone, a category of prescription painkillers that includes Vicodin and Lortab, ranked second. It accounted for 38 fatalities. Oxycodone, an opium-based drug that is the active ingredient in OxyContin and Percocet, was involved in 19 fatalities. Five years ago, oxycodone was the top killer in the region. But with rampant abuse of OxyContin receiving attention from both the news media and law enforcement, other drugs such as methadone have seen wider use. Some say a crackdown by law enforcement is one reason why drug deaths are leveling off. More than 20 people have been charged in recent years with distributing drugs that led to fatal overdoses in the region. About a half-dozen doctors have also been charged with overprescribing medications to their drug-abusing patients. "The more exposure it gets in the media and the news, it sends a signal that these people will be prosecuted," said Raymond Melick, resident agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration office in Roanoke. While problems with OxyContin and other prescription drugs seem to have peaked, authorities have been busy dealing with the emergence of methamphetamine abuse in far Southwest Virginia. Also known as meth and crank, methamphetamine is a powerful, addictive drug that is concocted from cold medicine and household chemicals at a growing number of makeshift labs. But while authorities have reported a twofold increase in the number of meth labs busted in far Southwest Virginia, the region has not seen any fatal overdoses from the drug this year, Massello said. Unlike prescription drug abusers, who often take increasingly large doses as they develop a tolerance for their drug of choice, methamphetamine users are able to sustain a high on a relatively small amount, according to Melick. "I don't think with methamphetamine you see the doses increasing from a small amount to a much larger amount," the DEA agent said. Most of the prescription drug overdoses are accidental, with users inadvertently crossing the line between a better high and a lethal level of consumption, Massello said. As methamphetamine abuse grows, there is increasing evidence that prescription drug abusers in Western Virginia are switching to the newer drug. U.S. Attorney John Brownlee said recently that a rumor spreading in the coalfields is that methamphetamine can cure an OxyContin addiction. Yet another reason for the decrease in prescription drug abuse could be the implementation of a monitoring program designed to cut down on doctor-shopping, in which abusers feign ailments to multiple doctors to obtain large amounts of pills, which are then sold on the black market. Under the prescription monitoring program, which began in September 2003, doctors and police can obtain someone's medication records from a computerized database compiled by the Department of Health Professions in Richmond. But there are limitations to the pilot program. For one thing, it covers only the western part of the state. And the approximately 300 pharmacies in the pilot area are required to submit only prescriptions they fill for Schedule II drugs, which include oxycodone and methadone. Through Dec. 1, there had been 1,125 inquiries for records from the database, which now contains nearly 500,000 prescriptions. That means that only 1 percent to 2 percent of the doctors in the area have used the system. Other states with prescription monitoring programs receive many more inquiries, and the operators of Virginia's system say expansion is the only way to increase its use. At a meeting last week in Roanoke, an advisory committee that has been monitoring the system reviewed several proposed changes. Under legislation that will be considered at the upcoming General Assembly session, the coverage area would be expanded to include the entire state. The system would also be broadened to include Schedule III and IV drugs, which include the widely abused hydrocodone-based painkillers. Some fear that the close monitoring of doctors - and with it the possibility of criminal prosecution - will have a chilling effect on physicians who have only recently begun to recognize that pain is undertreated. According to a survey conducted by Virginia Commonwealth University, 36 percent of the doctors questioned said they have prescribed fewer Schedule II drugs over the past three years, either because of intense media coverage or increased criminal prosecutions. However, other data presented to the advisory committee show that the volume of hydrocodone and methadone in the region has increased steadily over the past five years. After increasing by 210 percent between 1998 and 2000, oxycodone prescriptions have since leveled off at about 140,000 grams a year. The dramatic increase in methadone deaths has been raised as a criticism by opponents of the Roanoke Treatment Center, which plans to dispense the drug at a Hershberger Road clinic to addicts of opium-based drugs. But Massello has said that virtually all of the methadone overdoses seen by his office involve the pill form of the drug prescribed by doctors as a painkiller, not the liquid version dispensed by methadone clinics. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin