• DPMC Moderators: thegreenhand | tryptakid
  • Drug Policy & Media Coverage Welcome Guest
    View threads about
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
    Drug Busts Megathread Video Megathread

Drug Dealers Aren't to Blame for the Heroin Boom. Doctors Are.

slimvictor

Bluelight Crew
Joined
Dec 29, 2008
Messages
6,483
In 2010, a dentist extracted my wisdom teeth, told me to gargle with salt water, and sent me home with a prescription for a Costco-sized bottle of hydrocodone pills. During the procedure, she knocked me out with propofol—the same drug that killed Michael Jackson—and afterward I felt no pain. After a few hours, I popped one hydrocodone, more out of politeness than need. Weeks later, I still felt fine, but I popped two more, just to see what it was like. Hydrocodone’s dreamy, pain-dulling effect was impressive: I bit my cheek hard enough to draw blood, and it didn’t hurt at all. But the pills made me woozy. I then put the remaining 57 or so of them into my medicine cabinet, and I have no idea what happened to them after that. Lost in a move, I guess.

Heroin epidemics don’t come and go randomly, like the McRib. They have clearly identifiable causes—and in this case, by far the largest cause is doctor-prescribed pills. Every year since 2007, doctors have written more than 200 million prescriptions for opioid painkillers. (Consider that there are 240 million adults in the country.) And about four in five new heroin addicts report that they got addicted to prescription pills before they ever took heroin.

My experience was typical: Most people who try opiates don’t get addicted. But enough do. Since 2002, the total number of monthly heroin abusers has doubled to 335,000 nationwide. Some of the addicts get the pills through a well-meaning doctor or dentist, and many others swipe leftover pills from their friends or family members. The result for an addict is the same: Once the pills or money run out, heroin is still available—and cheap. At about $10 per hit, it can be half the street cost of pills.

“We seeded the population with opiates,” says Robert DuPont, an addiction doctor who served as drug czar under Presidents Nixon and Ford and who is now a harsh critic of opiate over-prescription. The supply shock from easy access to prescription drugs has pushed heroin use out of cities and into rural and suburban and middle-class areas. Massachusetts reported a staggering 185 heroin deaths outside its major cities since November, and Peter Shumlin, the governor of Vermont, spent his entire “state-of-the-state” address talking about the nearly eightfold increase in people seeking opiate treatment there since 2000. “What started as an OxyContin and prescription-drug addiction problem in Vermont has now grown into a full-blown heroin crisis,” he said.

cont at
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/...or-prescribed-pills?google_editors_picks=true
 
Doctors are not to blame for the idiocy of man. Addiction is always on the individual. I need painkillers, if other people fuck up with their medication it's their problem, don't come here and make it mine too. I don't really see what this kind of article will likely accomplish except making it harder for people who actually need pain medication to get a prescription.
 
Last edited:
The over prescription of opiates is obviously a major cause in the heroin problem but it's a double edged sword, crack down on opiate prescriptions and you're hurting all the people who legitimately need them for chronic pain.
Who gets to govern what is considered an absolutely necessary need for opiates?
In the end, as Toz said, these people are digging their own grave by getting themselves addicted to opiate painkillers.
In the end proper drug education would go a lot further than tightening the supply of opiate painkillers.
And have doctors who don't just write a prescription for oxy and hand it to the patient and walk away without properly explaining the possible addiction potential, side effects, all that jazz.
 
Not a terrible article, but since when has hydro acted like a local? Even when totally smacked out i can feel pain, i dont think i could bite my cheek and draw blood and not feel it. Gotta love the author lost their hydro. Medicine cabinet archeologist struck again. I broke my nose like a dec ago and got ten mg percs for a few months, eventually the specialist i went to cut me off completely. No taper or explanation, told me "the pain is in your head" i said yea dumbass its in my head, my face to be bexact.
 
we need to consider that this person decided to bite their "cheek hard enough to draw blood, and it didn't hurt at all."

When I had my wisdom teeth pulled I just had a local.. and I think I was given like 10 vikes.. I remember taking all those in one day to get buzzed and experiencing very little pain at all. Granted my w teeth seem to be pretty strait forward op and it was lame but pretty chill. That was a ways back and i remember thinking I dont feel good I feal awful.. hot and nauseous, time changed that in big way.

Also since I have said goodbye to the opiates I have had allot of dental work done.. a decent term of methadone treatment, a disease that made my mouth dry for years, a undiagnosed vitamin d deficiency.. took a tole on my teeth.. but im fixed up now, so anyway.. through two root canals, and twelve or so filling and two caps.. I haven't used anything for pain at all.. just the fast disrupting local. I know everyones different but at least for me I dont think any opiates are appropriate for any of these procedures. I mean I really had not even enough discomfort to warrant locating an advil.

So I think that responsible use of opiates in the future is the way to go, but as far as people already at high doses we need to address this side as well with a realistic and positive approach that doesnt fuck them.
 
Last edited:
Top