Pubdate: Sun, 26 Oct 2008 Source: Daily Telegraph (Australia) Copyright: 2008 News Limited Contact: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/113 Author: Janet Fife-Yeomans, Kelvin Bissett Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) YOU PAY FOR JUNKIE DRUG RORT THE painkiller oxycodone, heavily subsidised by taxpayers, has overtaken heroin as the most popular drug in the Kings Cross injecting room as evidence emerges of a booming black market. About 8200 of 17,971 drug injections in the room used the tablet painkiller, dubbed "hillbilly heroin". In comparison, just 6110 injections during the same June quarter period involved heroin, figures obtained by The Daily Telegraph reveal. Medicare Australia figures show taxpayers paid $53.2 million in 2007-08 to subsidise 1.63 million scripts through the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and Repatriation Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. Seven years ago, in the 2000-01 period, the cost to taxpayers was just $8.5 million for 441,398 scripts. The drug, a morphine derivative, is available with PBS subsidy to treat severe, disabling pain commonly felt by cancer patients and high level back or tooth ache. The growing use of oxycodone in the injecting room - triggered by the heroin drought - was an accurate sample of drug trends in the wider community, experts said last night. Tablets were almost certainly obtained through doctor shopping, the practice of attending numerous doctors with fake symptoms to access the drug for personal use or dealing. Doctor's prescriptions for oxycodone have exploded in recent years, with an undetermined amount of it now finding its way on to the black market, as has occurred in the US. It is dubbed "hillbilly heroin" because it is widely used by poorer residents in parts of the US. The figures on use in the injecting room were contained in the June quarterly report for the facility, released under Freedom of Information laws. There is now so much oxycodone in the injecting room that staff hand out filters to users to screen talc and other binding agents as addicts prepare the oral tablet for injection. Oxycodone is the generic name for the drug available under a number of names, usually OxyContin, OxyNorm or Endone or even in suppository form branded Proladone. Tablets that cost $1.50 over the counter sell for more than $50 on the black market and drug squad commander Superintendent Greig Newbury said its illegal use was an unprecedented problem. James Pitts, chief executive officer of the rehabilitation organisation Odyssey House, said there had been a significant increase in the numbers of people seeking help for addiction to oxycodone. He put the reason down to a heroin drought and because the drug was available from doctors. "It is a slow-release morphine derivative and people probably have their own particular doctors who prescribe it or they shop around at different doctors," Mr Pitts said. "It is not uncommon to forge prescriptions. People will steal prescription pads." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake