Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jun 2009 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2009 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Author: Monte Mitchell PRESCRIPTION DRUGS LEADING KILLER WILKESBORO -- Donna Reeves was worried about her daughter Casey's drug use. "I told her, 'I don't want to get that phone call (that) somebody's found my daughter dead,'" Reeves said. "Mom, I know my limits," Casey told her. But one Saturday, Casey stayed in bed uncharacteristically late. Her father had gone out of town to a charity event and her mother was upstairs. "I was the one who had to make that phone call to her daddy and tell him that his daughter was dead, because I'm the one who found her," Reeves said. Casey Reeves, 20, was one of 18 people who died in Wilkes County in 2006 of a prescription-drug overdose. Back then, authorities had already noticed a spike in prescription-drug overdose deaths in Wilkes and other Northwest North Carolina counties. Things are worse now. Someone has died of an accidental prescription-drug overdose almost every week so far this year in Wilkes County, according to authorities. That puts Wilkes County on pace to have double the 26 prescription-drug overdose deaths it had last year. The deaths in 2008 already ranked Wilkes County as having one of the nation's highest per-capita death rates from prescription-drug overdoses. Drugs of choice such are opiate-derived painkillers as Oxycodone, which includes such forms as OxyContin, Percocet and Percodan, as well as Hydrocodone, sold under trademarks including Vicodin. "Prescription drugs right now are the No. 1 problem," Wilkes Sheriff Dane Mastin said. "Not cocaine. Not meth. It's generating lots of break-ins, home invasions." In the neighborhood It's a trend shared by other rural counties in Northwest North Carolina. There were more than 22 deaths per 100,000 people in parts of the mountains and foothills in 2006-2007, compared with 10 deaths per 100,000 in the rest of the state, according to the N.C. State Center for Health Statistics. In Surry County, Sheriff Graham Atkinson said that prescription-drug overdoses are one of the most serious drug problems they have. People have died smoking rolled-up morphine patches. "You'll find them dead sitting there with it in their hand like a cigar," he said. He's infuriated about thieves who target elderly people who have legally prescribed medication for legitimate use. "We've had older folks tell us they hide their medicine in their underwear to keep their grandkids from stealing it," he said. In Wilkes County, Sheriff Mastin said the trend is getting worse in part because the bad economy, job losses and other problems are driving more people to seek escape in narcotics. It's a complex issue as to why the situation is worse in rural areas, but authorities say that part of the problem is that there are already a lot of legitimately prescribed painkillers out there for people who work hard at chicken plants, on farms and at other manual labor. People steal or buy leftover medication. It's not as easy to obtain heroin here as it would be in a metropolitan area, and opiate-based painkillers become a recreational drug they were never meant to be. How they get it More than 30 law-enforcement officers from Burke, Wilkes, Surry, Guilford, Yadkin, Ashe, Watauga and Stokes counties, as well as agents from the State Bureau of Investigation and other agencies, attended a recent seminar at Wilkes Community College about what to look for and how to fight prescription-drug abuse. "I'm fairly passionate about this because I have been on the other side of the table with the finger in my face (from the victim's family) saying, 'What are you going to do?'" Mastin told the assembled officers. "Education is one of the best tools we've got." Experts from Purdue Pharma, which manufactures OxyContin and other drugs, told seminar participants they should tell people to dispose of prescription medications rather than saving the unused pills. "This is where kids are getting this stuff: out of your medicine cabinet, out of your friend's medicine cabinet, out of grandma's medicine cabinet," said Landon Gibbs, a Purdue Pharma expert in prescription-drug diversion. It's also dangerous to share medications, experts warn, since people react so differently to powerful drugs, especially if they're already taking other substances or drinking alcohol. Wilkes County and its Substance Abuse Task Force have been working on the problem for years, and are preparing to introduce a major educational effort about the dangers of prescription-drug abuse. They're hoping to discourage people from doctor shopping -- the practice of visiting multiple doctors to obtain multiple prescriptions - -- and going door-to-door to persuade doctors to sign up for the controlled substance reporting system available in North Carolina since 2007, said Fred Brason II, the task-force chairman. Doctors could access a database and see what narcotics a patient has already been provided. The task force is also working with Wilkes Regional Medical Center to develop a policy to discourage the use of narcotics in the emergency room, Brason said. People complaining of a headache or other nonobvious problem would be provided non-narcotic medications until they can visit a primary care physician. "Anybody coming in will be treated for what they need. It's just not going to be the easy place (to obtain narcotics) anymore," Brason said. Hugh Chatham Memorial Hospital in Elkin adopted a similar policy earlier this year after noticing an unusually large number of people from Wilkes County coming over to use the Surry County hospital. A task force in Surry County has recently finished a study about its DWI rate, and plans to start a similar look at its prescription-drug problem, Atkinson said. Brason is the director of Project Lazarus, a pilot program set to begin this summer to provide anti-overdose kits to at-risk patients who are starting methadone treatment to try to kick opioid addictions. The kits include the drug naloxone (known as Narcan), which reverses opiate overdose by blocking the brain's opioid receptors. One never knows Wilkes is working with the federal Drug Enforcement Agency to schedule drug turn-in days in the near future. Authorities and residents alike say they want to spread the word about how dangerous and scary the misuse of prescription drugs can be. "One pill with the wrong person and they're gone," Brason said. Reeves says that her daughter, Casey, was a good young person from a good family. A former cheerleader at North Wilkes High School, Casey joined the National Guard early-entry program at 17 and wanted to pay her own way through school and become a teacher. Those dreams started to die when Casey started using Oxycodone and other drugs. But she was proud to be kicking the drugs on her own. Mother and daughter cried together as they talked about it. Casey had been clean for a few weeks when she slipped up. Her mother said she thinks that her body may not have been able to tolerate the dose she used to take. "If one person can hear this and it makes them change their mind about doing drugs or if it helps one family member, then maybe her death won't be in vain," Reeves said. "It's unbelievable how bad this is. I think some people think it only happens to other people. Everybody thinks 'It can't happen to me.'" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake