Pubdate: Sun, 30 Mar 2008 Source: Free Press, The (Kinston, NC) Copyright: 2008 Kinston Free Press Contact: http://www.kinston.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1732 Author: Chris Lavender, Staff Writer PRESCRIPTION FOR DISASTER Abuse Of Meds On The Rise Prescription drug abusers often don't realize that their behavior could lead to fatal consequences. Like the nation, Eastern North Carolina is seeing an increase in prescription drug abuse cases. According to the 2008 U.S. Department of Justice National Drug Threat Assessment report, "parents are less likely to talk to their children about the dangers of prescription drug abuse than they are about heroin, cocaine, crack, marijuana, or alcohol abuse." According to Partnership Attitude Tracking Study data for 2006, 81.5 percent of parents perceive abuse of prescription drugs to be a growing problem among teenagers, yet only 36.2 percent of parents discuss with their children the dangers of using prescription drugs to get high. In Kinston, Greenville and New Bern, prescription drug abuse is becoming more common, according to Port Human Services officials. Both Matt Lambeth and Karen McNair serve as Port Human Services counselors helping people with behavior issues which include prescription drug abuse. The abuse is not age discriminatory both agreed. For the past six years, McNair has seen a steady increase in prescription drug abuse. "I see about 40 patients a week from age 4 to about 70," she said. "The abuse is huge. It's easy to get these kinds of drugs which are becoming a hot commodity." McNair is based in Kinston. She said people become easily addicted to prescription medication and it's difficult for officials to track abusers. "People doctor shop to get prescriptions filled," she said. "Sometimes doctors are able to notify pharmacies about someone who is trying to fill an illegal prescription. Their name is flagged in a computer." Mixing prescription medicine with alcohol can cause respiratory depression, McNair said. Prescription drug overdoses are increasing in the area. "I knew one person in Greenville who died from an overdose," McNair said. "The overdoses are usually accidental." Both McNair and Lambeth agreed more education is needed to help people avoid abusing prescription drugs. Some prescription drugs can provide users with highs similar to cocaine. Finding alternative coping skills can help reduce someone's risk from becoming addicted to prescription drugs. "Exercise is a big mood stabilizer," McNair said. Like McNair, Lambeth sees a wide variety of prescription drug abusers. At his Port Human Services clinic in Greenville, Lambeth works with 60 people a week in the clinic's Opioid Agonist therapy program. "Sedative and Buprenorphine abuse is on the rise," he said. "We help identify peoples' triggers and counsel them." The Internet has created a new tool for abusers to get their prescription drug fix, he said. The number of Internet pharmacies selling controlled and non-controlled pharmaceutical drugs has increased, according to the National Drug Assessment Threat report. "Kids can go online and get any type of drug with very little oversight," he said. "People are ordering prescription drugs from India or Mexico suppliers and sometimes really don't know what they are getting." According to a Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America 2007 survey, about 5.4 million adults in the United States have purchased prescription drugs from a foreign country such as Canada or Mexico. About 50 percent said they purchased the drugs from another country because they did not have a prescription for the drug they wanted, according to the survey. Increased law enforcement and prescription monitoring programs have recently forced abusers who traditionally get their drugs through doctor-shopping, forged prescriptions or indiscriminate prescribing to use the Internet to order prescription drugs. "It's illegal for anyone to photocopy a written prescription," Donna Ramsey, Alternative Care Treatment Systems Clinical Director said. Before moving to Kinston, Ramsey was a mental health official working in Maine. She said "prescription drug abuse is rampant there." Prescription drug abusers would "malinger" at area hospital emergency rooms faking illness in order to get pain medication. Ramsey said abuse is increasing because "there is an excess of medication available all over the place" in many homes' medicine cabinets. "It's easier to hide the abuse," too she said. "The abuse can destroy families." Ramsey said she recently attended a 16-year-old girl's funeral in South Carolina. The girl died from a prescription drug overdose, she said. Many teens don't think there is great risk with mixing or abusing prescription drugs. According to the Partnership Attitude Tracking Study for 2005, 44 percent of adolescents in grades 7 through 12 did not perceive a great risk in trying pain relievers such as Vicodin or OxyContin that a doctor did not prescribe for them. Sixty-two percent of the teens surveyed said the drugs were easy to get from their parents' medicine cabinets and 51 percent said they didn't think the drugs were illegal. U.S. Department of Justice National Drug Threat Assessment 2008 Pharmaceutical drug abusers in a growing number of states are having greater difficulty in getting drugs through forgery. Criminal groups are stealing pharmaceutical drugs from delivery trucks. The number of Internet pharmacies selling controlled and non controlled pharmaceutical drugs has increased. Methadone related deaths and overdoses have increased sharply since the 1990s. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom