More Americans die each year from overdoses of prescription painkillers than from cocaine and heroin combined.
Despite efforts by insurers, states and the federal government to crack down, a new report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that narcotics such as Vicodin, OxyContin and methadone took nearly 15,000 American lives in 2008, up from 4,000 in 1999.
A big part of the problem stems from painkillers that aren’t prescribed, often taken by drug abusers seeking to get high. The CDC noted that, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 12 million Americans used prescription painkillers non-medically in 2010.
As ABC News reports, Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the CDC, said the nation is “in the midst of an epidemic of prescription narcotic overdose.” And he largely blamed “a few irresponsible doctors” for writing bogus prescriptions rather than “drug pushers on street corners.”
The CDC found that in 2010 there were enough painkillers prescribed to supply every adult with a one-month supply.
When legally prescribed and covered by health insurance, these painkillers are effective and relatively inexpensive. But they also are highly addictive, and potentially deadly, when taken with alcohol and other prescription drugs. Purchased illegally, the street cost of these pain pills can be as much as $80 apiece.
Death rates among non–Hispanic whites and American Indians or Alaska Natives were three times higher than those for blacks and Hispanic whites. In addition, the death rate was highest among people ages 35 to 54.
In recent years many states have attempted to stem the use of painkillers. Their efforts have included working with pharmacies to set up systems designed to stop drug abusers trying to obtain multiple prescriptions for painkillers.
As USA Today reports, overall there were 36,450 fatal drug overdoses in 2008. That included accidental deaths, suicides and cases involving illegal substances such as heroin and cocaine, along with prescription medicines.
ROBERT T. NELSON
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