Pubdate: Sun, 09 Nov 2008 Source: Morganton News Herald, The (NC) Copyright: 2008 Media General Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/156UTORh Website: http://www.morganton.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1623 Author: Sharon McBrayer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) RX ABUSE BECOMING EPIDEMIC PROBLEM Morganton - (Part 2 of 2) OxyContin was the drug that took the life of Pamela Logsdon's son in July. Abuse of the drug, a powerful painkiller, has been a problem in Burke County for a long time, according to Rick Hasson with the Burke County Narcotics Task Force. Hasson said people were overdosing on the drug left and right a few years back. That's because the drug is prepared for timed release, he said, but people were crushing it and, when they do that, the entire dose rushes into their bodies, Hasson said. "We were seeing people taking three or four at a time," Hasson said. "People think, 'It's prescription drugs, it's not going to hurt me.'" People addicted to OxyContin appear to be willing to do just about anything to get it. People will steal it from family members with legitimate prescriptions, Hasson said. Some will forge prescriptions. Some go from doctor to doctor to get prescriptions. Hasson said people also can buy OxyContin from some people with a legitimate prescription, but who live on a fixed income and sell it to make some extra money. Addiction knows no age limit. Hasson said the narcotics task force has dealt with kids in middle school and 80-year-olds. However, he added, older abusers are few and far between. Prescription drugs are getting to be as much of a problem as illegal street drugs, Hasson said. Lately, he said, people have turned to other strong painkillers for a high - hydrocodone, Xanax, Vicodin and others. Deaths from prescription painkillers have reached epidemic proportions, according to Scott K. Proescholdbell at the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services. He said states across the nation are trying to get a handle on the problem. In 2004, North Carolina started a collaborative leadership committee to implement the recommendations of the state's Task Force to Prevent Deaths from Unintentional Drug Overdoses. The task force, created in 2002, looked at ways to prevent and reduce the number of deaths from unintentional overdoses of illicit and licit drugs. From the task force came a leadership team that monitors unintentional drug overdoses, develops programs to try to prevent unintentional drug overdoses and protects the legitimate use of controlled substances in the medical practice, according to a 2004 release from the state. According to a state report, 307 people in North Carolina died in 2007 from an unintentional methadone overdose; 49 from heroin; 242 from other opioids such as OxyContin and related oxycodones; 91 from other synthetic narcotics; and 216 from cocaine. According to the leadership team's estimate, Burke County in 2006-07 had 19 to 27 poisoning deaths that might be related to drug overdoses. Poisoning deaths with undetermined causes are included in the numbers. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom