Special panel says state in midst of "epidemic'' of OxyContin and heroin use

WeedMyLips

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Abuse of OxyContin and heroin in Massachusetts has reached epidemic levels and must be attacked with the same fervor now being directed toward controlling the H1N1 flu virus, a special state commission reported today.

“The Commonwealth is in the midst of a serious and dangerous epidemic,’’ the panel, known formally as the Massachusetts OxyContin and Heroin Commission, said in a 71 page report released today at the Statehouse..

The report that draws a parallel between the number of US service men and women from Massachusetts who have lost their lives in two wars – and the number of people who died from overdosing on one or both of the drugs between 2002 and 2007.

During those five years, 78 service people lost their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan while 3,265 died from drug-related causes, the panel, known formally as the Massachusetts OxyContin and Heroin Commission.

“The Commonwealth is losing men and women on its streets at a rate of 42 to 1 compared to what the state is losing in two wars overseas,’’ the panel said in its executive summary. “Addiction is a medical disorder, and we have a public health epidemic on our hands that is larger than the flu pandemic.’’

The panel made 20 recommendations, including:

-- Strengthen the existing prescription monitoring program so that public health officials learn more quickly about patients collecting multiple prescriptions for the same drug and doctors who appear to be writing more prescriptions than reasonably necessary for their caseload.

-- Limit criminal sanctions against substance abusers who seeks medical help for using illegal drugs and create a Good Samaritan law to shield anyone helping steer an addict towards treatment.

-- Increase support for the three “recovery high schools’’ where teen substance abusers recover in an supportive educational, age-appropriate environment. The schools are located in Boston, Beverly and Springfield. Invest in substance abuser diversion programs that steer the addicted away from costly prisons into less expensive recovery programs.

“If the H1N1 virus killed 3,000 people in a five year period in Massachusetts, the crisis would be center stage and the entire Commonwealth would be working to find a solution to protect the public,’’ the panel said. “Because of the stigma surrounding substance abuse, this epidemic is left in the shadows and little light has been put upon reforming the policies involving substance abuse in the Commonwealth.’’


By John R. Ellement, Globe Staff

http://www.boston.com/news/local/bre...l_panel_s.html
 
oxycontin/ heroin abuse has been crazy lately across the whole country and most definetely in New England...I mean I have an easier time finding OC than anything else
 
I took a class where we looked at the development of OC abuse, I'm pretty sure they said it was somewhere in Maine that it all first started.
 
yeah.... look at what devastation the swine flu pandemic has caused... just like they warned us

Abuse of OxyContin and heroin in Massachusetts has reached epidemic levels and must be attacked with the same fervor now being directed toward controlling the H1N1 flu virus, a special state commission reported today.
 
I took a class where we looked at the development of OC abuse, I'm pretty sure they said it was somewhere in Maine that it all first started.

i find it hard to believe it 'started' anywhere. but im from maine, and it has one of the highest levels of opiate (pills mostly) abuse in the nation. there are a shitload of old poor people willing to sell pills, not to mention, mainers like to get fucked up. it was always incredibly easy to get pills there.
 
Strengthen the existing prescription monitoring program so that public health officials learn more quickly about patients collecting multiple prescriptions for the same drug and doctors who appear to be writing more prescriptions than reasonably necessary for their caseload.


This bothers me, i've personally seen the damage this causes. It causes doctors who aren't quacks to get caught up in these sweeps and makes most other doctors afraid to prescribe for legit reasons.
 
Maybe if life in America wasn't so heartless, bloodsucking and mind-numbingly boring, people wouldn't feel the need to medicate themselves into a stupor every day of their lives??

I blame this "Oxycontin epidemic" (and I DO believe its an epidemic) on the materialistic crap-hole society we're forced to exist in, and its keen ability to suck the life and humanity out of the majority of people unfortunate enough to be forced to tolerate it.
 
How the hell do you compare deaths from "drug related causes" to deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan? Wow. Maybe they should have included civilian deaths due to the wars there. No, wait, they don't count.
 
Reppin bean town baby, got those 80s all day erry day and that fire deisel no matter where u walk
 
Maybe if life in America wasn't so heartless, bloodsucking and mind-numbingly boring, people wouldn't feel the need to medicate themselves into a stupor every day of their lives??

I blame this "Oxycontin epidemic" (and I DO believe its an epidemic) on the materialistic crap-hole society we're forced to exist in, and its keen ability to suck the life and humanity out of the majority of people unfortunate enough to be forced to tolerate it.



I TOTALLY AGREE WITH YOU...

and where has everybody been; I knew this was becoming epidemic years ago...
 
I took a class where we looked at the development of OC abuse, I'm pretty sure they said it was somewhere in Maine that it all first started.

As daysonatrain stated, I am pretty sure OC abuse started everywhere that OC was being prescribed. I am not saying you are wrong, and increased levels of reported abuse probably did start in Maine, but with a drug like OC it is sure to be abused wherever people are getting it prescribed.

I remember reading about Opana being brought to the market, and within a month dealers had the pills. Now it is almost as common as OC in my town of about 100,000 people in Nebraska. Man am I a glad for that %).
 
i find it hard to believe it 'started' anywhere. but im from maine, and it has one of the highest levels of opiate (pills mostly) abuse in the nation. there are a shitload of old poor people willing to sell pills, not to mention, mainers like to get fucked up. it was always incredibly easy to get pills there.


People from Maine are called "Mainers"?


That's forkin aweshum! I wanna be a Mainer!
 
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