Pubdate: Thu, 29 Apr 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: Tera Camus Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) OXYCONTIN BLAMED FOR 8 DEATHS C.B. Police Review 18-Month Period That Saw 20 Sudden Deaths SYDNEY - Eight of the past 20 sudden deaths in the Cape Breton Regional Municipality are linked to the highly addictive painkiller OxyContin, this newspaper has learned. Associate Chief Dave Wilson of Cape Breton Regional Police told this newspaper that a review of case files over the past 18 months reveals many of the sudden-death victims in 2003 abused prescription or illicit drugs, or mixed prescription drugs with booze. "Among those (20) deaths, one was morphine, one was cocaine, eight (remains) were verified as having OxyContin," Associate Chief Wilson said. "In one of these (deaths), there was 15 different drugs in one individual . . . including aspirin, Tylenol 3, Valium, Ritalin, OxyContin and others. "It's not just Oxy," he said. "There's a number of other prescription drugs that are being abused." One powerful drug is morphine, which can be lethal if not taken as prescribed. Only two area physicians are licensed to prescribe the drug in the area, yet it's commonly found on the street. "Oxy is a serious concern to us, but the other drugs are, too . . . You've got people in the community selling morphine pills, and there's a lot of people taking that, too." The force has received only one toxicology report from the lab so far from the 10 sudden deaths this year. That report showed the cause of death to be a lethal mixture of booze and multiple prescription drugs. In one of those recent deaths, police on the scene found narcotic painkillers Demerol and morphine, he said. In another case, a young man died after taking morphine pills in the afternoon, then shooting cocaine, and using OxyContin that night. Associate Chief Wilson said if the province continues to ignore the need to better regulate the prescription drug trade, death rates will increase each year. "We haven't had a death in the past 10 to 14 days, so that's good," he said, adding later, "We need a better monitoring system." The province's monitoring system relies on pharmacies to report drugs sold within three weeks of sale, but doctors who are writing prescriptions have no immediate means of checking on patients who may be faking illness or seeing more than one doctor to get pills for the underground market. Stolen pills are also moved and sold on the streets. But the sudden-death toll in 2003 pales in comparison to the previous year's figures. According to autopsy reports obtained by this newspaper, more than 30 people across Cape Breton Island died in 2002 with booze, prescription drugs and/or illicit drugs in their systems. Some of those deaths were deemed accidental or deliberate suicides. Others involved motor vehicle crashes, falls and even obesity. Only two sudden deaths were related to OxyContin. An autopsy of a 38-year-old man who died in North Sydney in November showed he ultimately died from alcohol poisoning and possible hypothermia after passing out in a car parked in his yard. His report showed the presence of multiple prescription drugs, including OxyContin, as well as cocaine and marijuana. A Glace Bay man was found dead in his Brookside Street home in January with OxyContin in his blood. The 26-year-old, who had a history of drug abuse, died after using the painkiller, plus marijuana, methadone and other prescription drugs. Among the other deaths in 2002 in which drugs or alcohol were found to be factors: A 42-year-old Margaree Valley man who shot himself in August was impaired by alcohol and drugs. A 32-year-old Indian Brook woman died in a fire in March, but she had almost four times the legal limit of alcohol in her blood, plus marijuana and multiple prescription painkillers. A 46-year-old man in Sydney fell to his death in March after he consumed three times the legal limit of booze, plus marijuana and prescription drugs. One in every 200 Cape Bretoners was prescribed OxyContin in 2002, three times the rate in other areas of the province. In 2003, there were almost a half-million pills prescribed, up just slightly from the previous year. The drug is linked to hundreds of deaths in the United States, where it was first introduced in the 1990s. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom