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What are the actual odds that someone in your family, or someone you know, will end up addicted to drugs or alcohol?

Drug Rehab Referral | Our Views

OxyContin Addiction – How It Becomes Part of Your Life

August 7, 2011

Many people still think of ‘drug addicts’ as people who live in rooms with mattresses on the floor, skulk around in alleys, and hang around with the ‘wrong people.’ But drug addiction, especially OxyContin addiction and addiction to other prescription painkillers has a new face – doctors, lawyers, accountants, business execs, even politicians – all thought of as ‘professionals,’ not the kind of people who even take drugs, let alone become addicted. And, yet, they are the majority of people who are getting OxyContin rehab.

This week in the news was the story of prescription drug addict Freddie McMahan, a 57-year-old electrician, retired from a major company.

McMahan suffered from scoliosis – a side-to-side curvature of the spine – and he was in constant pain.

For help, he went to a pain clinic – since pain was his complaint, he thought he would be going to experts. Instead of something to relieve the pain, he was given drugs.

Here’s an excerpt from the news item:

“Every month for two years, Freddie McMahan would get in his Lincoln LS and drive to a nearby pain clinic, where a doctor would prescribe him a cocktail of narcotic drugs. Initial prescriptions for codeine and Demerol to treat McMahan’s scoliosis eventually led to large amounts of OxyContin, Xanax and morphine. By the third week of his month’s supply, McMahan would run out, leaving him scrambling to get his fix somewhere else or go into withdrawal. A new month, however, meant another visit back to the pain clinic, joined by what McMahan observed to be an ever-increasing number of expectant patients. “I don’t know why they were there,” he said, “but I went to them to get the pain pills I was addicted to.”

After two years, McMahan decided he needed help. He went into a drug rehab program – it worked. He is now drug-free, and is helping others with the same problem.

Prescription drug addiction is so widespread right now that addiction treatment facilities often have more clients with prescription drug problems than with street drugs. And many of those clients are ‘respectable’ people – not someone you would think of as a ‘drug addict.’

OxyContin addiction – or addiction to any prescription drug – can be addressed with the right drug rehab program. Not every drug rehab facility is experienced with prescription drugs, and getting off them can be medically dangerous. So, it’s important to choose the right place.

At Drug Rehab Referral, we help you sift through the hundreds of options available to you to make sure you get the help you need.

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Prescription Painkillers – Florida’s Newest Tourist Attraction

January 2, 2011

So many people are coming to Florida for prescription painkillers it has inspired the coining of a new phrase – “Pill Tourism.”  Why are they coming to Florida? Florida has 900 pain management clinics. The vast majority of these pain clinics dole out prescriptions with little to no examination of patients, have their own on-site dispensary so ‘patients’ don’t have to go to the drug store, don’t have a board-certified pain management doctor on staff, and are generally not even run by a practicing doctor!

People come here because the drugs are so very easy to get.

Some interesting Florida statistics regarding painkillers:

  • Among the 50 top painkiller prescribers in the U.S., 49 are in Florida.
  • In the first six months of 2008, the nation’s top 25 oxycodone-dispensing doctors were all located in Florida.

A just-completed three-month investigation that focused on making undercover purchases of painkillers (mostly Oxycodone) in Florida arrested 135 people, seized 17,000 pills and $3.6 million.

Are all the people getting these pills in pain? Absolutely not. But even those who are in pain generally get a lot more pills than they need. They sell the remainder to pay for their trip to Florida.

Geez. Big Pharma must be thrilled with all the ill-gotten profits. Has anyone out there ever figured out how much profit the manufacturer of Oxycodone is making on actual abuse of the drug? Whatever the number, I would bet it’s not something any company would be thrilled to give up.

Somehow, prescription drugs are going to have to get under control. In some areas, like Florida, they’re a far worse problem than illegal drugs. And that’s just for the people who aren’t really in pain and don’t need them. There’s also a serious addiction problem for those who are actually in pain.

I think a major solution might be more, and more accessible, insurance coverage of things like chiropractic, acupuncture, natural, herbal and alternative medicines, massage therapy, physical therapy, and so on – things that are known to help people with pain. That won’t get rid of the problem of people taking painkillers when they’re not in pain; but it will help people stay off painkillers in the first place (or only use them for a very short time), get people off painkillers (although they might also need drug rehab if they’re addicted), and stop people who need painkillers from turning into pushers so they can get the drugs they need.

What do you think?

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Florida’s Prescription Drug Addiction – Painkillers are Epidemic

April 6, 2009

If you’re living in Florida and have a friend or family member with a prescription drug addiction or abuse problem – even if they got the pills from a doctor – it’s no surprise to us. It would be difficult to find an addiction treatment center that is not currently helping a fairly large number of people who are trying to get off them.

Florida has been called ‘the pill state’ for a few years now. Recently it was reported that Broward County, home to Fort Lauderdale, has so many pain clinics popping up that it’s now being called the painkiller capital of the United States. The population is about 1.8 million and the pain clinics alone prescribed about 6.5 million painkillers in the last half of 2008.

Florida doesn’t have a prescription drug monitoring program so no one is really watching over what’s happening to these patients other than the doctors at the pain clinics and, since their specialty is managing pain – i.e. controlling the symptoms with drugs instead of offering treatment that could get rid of the underlying problem - depending on them to make sure the patient isn’t in trouble is a little like having Cinderella made a ward of her wicked stepmother.

And the residents of the county – as well as thousands of people who come from out of state to get painkillers, some even camping outside the doors of the county’s 85 pain clinics waiting for them to open – are paying for it. The coroner says deaths from prescription drug overdose have increased by 107% in the last two years and called the situation an epidemic of drug abuse. God only knows how many people are addicted – it’s hard to escape addiction with painkillers so the numbers have got to be big.

The brisk business of painkillers in Broward County is also servicing other states. The total number of oxycodone pills handed out by just 45 doctors – who the DEA says they ‘hate’ to call doctors because they’re just after the money – handed out 9 million oxycodone pills (they could be OxyContin, vicodin, percocet, and so on) in the last six months of 2008.

If you have a friend or family member who is in pain, do yourself and them a favor and find an alternative treatment. Prescription painkillers are highly addictive and getting them off the pills once they’ve started is tough. If they’re already using them, find an addiction treatment center that can help them. And remember one thing – if they say they can’t stop because they’re still in pain it’s possible that the painkillers themselves are causing it. Extended use of painkillers can do that.

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