Pubdate: Wed, 17 Mar 2010 Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC) Copyright: 2010 Asheville Citizen-Times Contact: http://www.citizen-times.com/contact/letters.shtml Website: http://www.citizen-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/863 Author: Josh Boatwright WNC HAS HIGH RATE OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG DEATHS Law enforcement agencies across Western North Carolina are hauling in loads of drugs this week. Pills, patches and liquid doses are coming in by the thousands. The difference between this and most large drug operations is this one doesn't involve informants, drawn weapons or jail time. The drug holders are coming willingly. Officers are sitting behind folding tables at police departments, pharmacies and grocery stores across the state this week collecting old or unneeded prescription and over-the-counter drugs from the community as part of Operation Medicine Drop. Agencies have already raked in tens of thousands of pills. An Asheville man who pleaded guilty Monday to supplying methadone that killed his friend is the latest example of a growing problem with prescription drug abuse that has had a disproportionate impact on the western part of the state. Most WNC counties have higher death rates caused by overdose or misuse of medications than the rest of the state and teens here are more likely to abuse them. "The reality of it is it's so easily accessible, that's one of the biggest problems. There's not a house in Macon County or any other in the United States that doesn't have some kind of medicine in their medicine cabinet" Macon County Sheriff Robert Holland said. A leading cause of death Nearly 7 million Americans abuse prescription drugs, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The number increased 80 percent from 2000 to 2006, with more people abusing legal drugs than cocaine, heroin, hallucinogens, ecstasy and inhalants combined. Drug overdose is a leading cause of deaths from unintentional injuries in North Carolina, followed only by vehicle accidents, according to a recent report by the N.C. Division of Public Health. Unintentional poisoning, mostly tied to prescription drugs, has killed more than 5,700 people in North Carolina since 1999, accounting for 17 percent of all injury deaths, according to the report. From 2005-07, the state had an average poisoning death rate of 10.1 per 100,000 people, but many WNC counties had rates above 18 per 100,000. N.C. Attorney General Roy Cooper recently met with sheriffs from several WNC counties in Bryson City to discuss the growing prescription drug problem, but he said there's no data to explain exactly why the region has a higher rate of overdose deaths. Tamara Styles, an agent with the Buncombe County Anti-Crime Task Force, said her drug unit has seen prescription fraud and abuse spike in recent years with a caseload that vastly outweighs cocaine, methamphetamine and marijuana combined. One explanation may be the fact that WNC hasn't had a significant influx of heroin, forcing opiate addicts to seek their fix in similar medications, Styles said. Authorities in Macon County, where the death rate reached 29 per 100,000 from 2006-2008, joined several law enforcement agencies in WNC and across the state last April in a one-day effort to collect prescription drugs from the community. Deputies and police raked in 28,000 pills in Macon and 128,000 across the western region during the three-hour Operation Pill Crusher event. That event's success inspired this week's effort, which includes more than 180 events sponsored by agencies in 58 counties across the state. Threat to the youth Getting dangerous medicines out of the hands of teens and children is one of the main goals of this week's collections. The latest Risk Behavior Survey done by the state department of health and human services showed abuse of drugs like hydrocodone and oxycontin is more prevalent among students in WNC than in other parts of the state. In WNC, 25 percent of high school students have used pharmaceuticals recreationally at least once, according to an analysis of surveys done by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. In the center and east of the state that number was 17 percent. "One of the problems with young people is that two-thirds of them get prescription drugs that they abuse from either their own home or from friends who get it from their homes," Cooper said. Sheriff David Mahoney sat at a folding table at the Brevard Police Department on Sunday with Ricky McCall from the narcotics task force counting approximately 3,000 pills, vials of liquid opiates and other drugs. "The scary thing is kids are having things called 'pharm parties' where they all bring pills and throw them in a bowl," Mahoney said. They grab pills randomly and take them, often with alcohol, he said. Nikolas Flores had been trading drugs with his friend, Christopher Waters, during a party in Henderson County before Waters overdosed on methadone and died. Flores, 20, now faces jail time after pleading guilty to involuntary manslaughter in the death of the 19-year-old Mills River man. Buncombe County deputies gathered more than 13,000 pills ranging from antacids to painkillers during a drop-off event Sunday and they expect to collect even more through the end of the week. Counties around the mountains are participating in the program. Most law enforcement agencies are holding one-day events. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D