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Painkiller Opana: The new scourge of Rural America

Unbreakable

Bluelighter
Joined
Oct 22, 2009
Messages
5,415
Opana is the hot new prescription drug of abuse, sometimes with tragic consequences.

At least nine people have died so far this year from prescription drug overdoses in Scott County, Indiana. Most of the fatalities involved Opana, according to county coroner Kevin Collins.

Law enforcement officials are alarmed by the rise of Opana abuse, which they said started after Oxycontin was changed in late 2010 to make that drug more difficult to snort or inject for a heroin-like high. Oxycontin is a brand of oxycodone.

Opana, known by such street names as "stop signs," "the O bomb," and "new blues," is crushed and either snorted or injected. Crushing defeats the pill's "extended release" design, releasing the drug all at once.

Oxycontin's new pills make it harder to crush them into a powder as they instead become gummy and cannot be readily snorted or injected. This drove abusers to switch to Opana or to generic, immediate-release forms of oxycodone, according to John Burke, president of the National Association of Drug Diversion Investigators. Drug abuse experts have also found an increase in heroin use.

The Opana problem has been reported by abuse experts around the country. In Florida, for example, the number of oxymorphone-related deaths rose to 493 in 2010, an increase of 109 percent from the previous year, according to Jim Hall, director of a drug abuse center at Nova Southeastern University in Florida.

Opana is the hot new prescription drug of abuse, sometimes with tragic consequences.

At least nine people have died so far this year from prescription drug overdoses in Scott County, Indiana. Most of the fatalities involved Opana, according to county coroner Kevin Collins.

Law enforcement officials are alarmed by the rise of Opana abuse, which they said started after Oxycontin was changed in late 2010 to make that drug more difficult to snort or inject for a heroin-like high. Oxycontin is a brand of oxycodone.

Opana, known by such street names as "stop signs," "the O bomb," and "new blues," is crushed and either snorted or injected. Crushing defeats the pill's "extended release" design, releasing the drug all at once.

Oxycontin's new pills make it harder to crush them into a powder as they instead become gummy and cannot be readily snorted or injected. This drove abusers to switch to Opana or to generic, immediate-release forms of oxycodone, according to John Burke, president of the National Association of Drug Diversion Investigators. Drug abuse experts have also found an increase in heroin use.

The Opana problem has been reported by abuse experts around the country. In Florida, for example, the number of oxymorphone-related deaths rose to 493 in 2010, an increase of 109 percent from the previous year, according to Jim Hall, director of a drug abuse center atNova Southeastern University in Florida.

Read full story:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/27/us-drugs-abuse-opana-idUSBRE82Q04120120327


Meh not such a fan of the Opana's
 
When are people gonna learn? You stop people from finding one high, they are gonna search out another. It's sad people have to die to get this point across. I've never done Opana, but I was heavily into Oxycodone for awhile. From my understanding, Opana is waaay more potent than Oxy. This is just sad...
 
^Exactly, this is just more another example for the argument that we should legalize all drugs so people can choose less-addictive, more potent stuff as opposed to legal, addictive, pharmaceutical side-effected drugs.
 
Afaik they have already changed the formula of the ER opanas to be abuse resistant like ocs.

Like someone already said though, people are always going to find a way to get high. If its not oxy or opana theres always gonna be something else to replace it and then something else to replace that, and the cycle goes on and on...
 
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