Pubdate: Mon, 13 Mar 2006 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Copyright: 2006 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.indystar.com/help/contact/letters.html Website: http://www.starnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/210 Author: Paul Bird Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) TWO SISTERS LIVES CHANGED FOREVER The drug deaths of her half sister and nephew from a fentanyl overdose nearly a year ago in Shelbyville changed Jackie Hyden's life. The rural Knoxville, Tenn., homemaker now tells her family's story to schoolchildren as part of a drug education program, reaching as many as 800 children at a time. "I tell them that drugs can kill, and they do kill," Hyden said during a recent visit to her former hometown, Shelbyville. "If I save just one person, it's worth it." Anna Layton, 48, and her son, Christopher Layton, 28, died March 21 -- within an hour of each other -- in Shelbyville. Each died from chewing and injecting fentanyl from a pain patch that a doctor had prescribed for Anna Layton. Anna Layton abused several prescriptions she obtained to control pain caused by a shoulder injury, Hyden said. Layton became addicted to heroin, a street drug, in her late teens, her sister said. "She got pregnant with Christopher and went cold turkey without drugs for more than 20 years," Hyden said. Shortly after Christopher Layton was born, his father, Steve Layton, committed suicide. "It was all over Anna telling him to get off drugs or she was leaving him," Hyden said. In 1996, drugs slipped back into Anna's life after she injured a shoulder at work. "She started again by taking muscle relaxers and pain medication given to her by a doctor," Hyden said. "Soon, she began using the prescription drugs to get high." The medications were easy for Anna Layton to obtain from area doctors, Hyden said. One Indianapolis pain clinic stopped giving her prescriptions after detecting she had been using marijuana. Hyden said her sister simply found another doctor to give her a new prescription. In 1999, Hyden and her husband moved to the Knoxville area. She occasionally returned to Shelbyville for short visits with her half sister. "We didn't grow up in the same house, but we became very close as adults," Hyden said. "We often said nothing or nobody was going to keep us apart. We were sisters." During visits at Anna's Shelbyville apartment, Hyden caught her sister shooting drugs into her neck, behind her knees and other locations. "I tried tough love, too," Hyden said. "I took her home with me to Tennessee and she stayed 3 1/2 weeks, and we thought she was going to be all right." The women often exchanged greeting cards pledging their love and support for each other. They spoke nearly daily by telephone. On March 20, Anna told Hyden that Christopher was coming over for a big dinner. "They had a drug party, instead," Hyden said. "Anna broke her promise. She let drugs separate us forever." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek