Pubdate: Sun, 21 Mar 2004 Source: Halifax Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2004 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Darrin McGrath Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) OXYCONTIN PLAGUES STREETS OF ST. JOHN'S Phamacies in St. John's are putting signs in their windows saying they don't stock OxyContin to discourage would-be thieves from breaking in. Like Cape Breton, Newfoundland has seen an epidemic of prescription drug abuse, and the narcotic painkiller has been blamed for seven overdose deaths. The provincial government has established a task force of health care and justice officials to examine OxyContin abuse. Dr. Thomas Cantwell, chief psychiatrist for the Health Care Corporation of St. John's, is a member of the task force. "It's difficult to know when it (OxyContin) became a problem, but it's only on the market since the mid-1990s, so it's a relatively new drug. Like any new drug it takes some time before people find that it's got potential for abuse," Cantwell says. Cantwell says that OxyContin abuse is spread across the major centers of the province. "But I don't think the extent of OxyContin abuse in this province is any greater than anywhere else. It's been highlighted a lot more here. Unfortunately, it has become the drug of choice among many of our population," he says. OxyContin is a slow-release product usually prescribed as a twice-a-day dose. It is available in various strengths, the highest being 80 mg. The drug is made up of granules that are slowly (and safely) absorbed into the bloodstream. Addicts are bypassing the slow-release nature of the drug by either crushing and snorting it, or by dissolving it in water and injecting it. This raises concern over exchange of, or re-use of needles. OxyContin is extremely powerful and highly addictive, Cantwell explains. "To put it into context, it is one of the opiate drugs; so is morphine. Society knows very well about morphine. OxyContin is about two-and-a-half times as powerful as morphine and that's significant," he says. One of the reasons the OxyContin task force was created was the overdose deaths. "There have been now, I believe, seven confirmed deaths and that's quite high even when you look at all the other narcotics and medications on the market. I think people are beginning to worry: Is there something specific about this particular drug that is causing so many deaths?" Cantwell says. Cantwell says that it is difficult to quantify the number of OxyContin-related admissions to psychiatric facilities. He has seen people admitted who are trying to get off the drug, but he also sees addicts turning up when the drug's availability on the street dries up. Essentially, the addicts check themselves into hospital to get a fix. "And then as soon as it becomes available on the street again, they tend to sign themselves out and not follow through with treatment," Cantwell says. He goes on to explain that the health care providers are beginning to steer away from weaning addicts off the drug because weaning just doesn't seem to work. When asked where on the street the drug is coming from, Cantwell states that it is coming from pharmacies and doctors. "The police tell me there is very little of it coming into the province on the black market. It's coming from legitimate sources, but it's also coming from armed robberies of pharmacies, or break-ins into homes or pharmacies," he says. A spate of pharmacy break-ins has generated concern among the police and that has led to the signs in pharmacy windows. On the street, the drug fetches high profits, selling for about a dollar per milligram, making an 80-mg tablet worth $80. Cantwell encountered one case of an older person with chronic pain who was selling her OxyContin prescription, then buying another painkiller and realizing a profit. "We have to look at how it is being prescribed. Do we need more education of physicians prescribing it?" Cantwell asks. He wonders how young people with no documented evidence of chronic pain are being prescribed OxyContin. "There are doctors out there who, knowingly or unknowingly, are writing prescriptions that they shouldn't be writing," he says. Cantwell is very concerned that the drug is finding its way into schools among young people. While he sees the media's interest in OxyContin as beneficial, he thinks that heightened media coverage may tempt some people to try the drug. He also worries that the focus on OxyContin may shift attention from other addictions, such as gambling, which has caused many deaths by suicide. "Addiction is the basic illness and it has many heads, drugs being one. OxyContin is one of those many drugs that make up the drugs of addiction," Cantwell says. Darrin McGrath writes for The Chronicle Herald from his home in St. John's. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin