Most drug OD deaths due to potent painkillers

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Most drug OD deaths due to potent painkillers

Reuters
Tue Jul 25, 2006


NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The most common drugs involved in fatal overdoses listed on death certificates are prescription opioid painkillers, often obtained illicitly, investigators report.

The worsening abuse of potent opioid drugs, such as oxycodone or fentanyl, coincides with an increase in the prescribing of these drugs by doctors, who have been encouraged to treat chronic pain more effectively, Dr. Leonard J. Paulozzi and associates explain in their article in the journal Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety.

However, they say the two trends are not necessarily connected, and they recommend that prevention of opioid abuse should not diminish the quality of care for patients with a legitimate need for pain relief.

The researchers, based at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, evaluated trends in drug poisoning deaths using government databases.

Between 1979 and 1990, the mortality rate for unintentional drug poisoning rose nearly 60 percent, they report, an increase of 5.3 percent per year. From 1990 to 2002, the rate increased by more than 200 percent, at an average of 18.1 percent per year.

Opioids were responsible for more deaths than cocaine or heroin by the year 2002.

Drug overdose deaths predominantly involved middle-aged men, supporting the contention that drug abuse was responsible for the increased mortality, Paulozzi's team points out, rather than appropriate use by patients with chronic pain, who are more likely to be older women.

Further evidence comes from medical examiner reports suggesting that most victims have a history of substance abuse, and do not have a prescription for an opiate drug, the researchers add.

"Drug abuse and under-treated pain are both public health crises, but the solution to one need not undermine the other," Dr. Scott M. Fishman writes in a related commentary.

Fishman, from the University of California, Davis, argues that the new findings should not be used as evidence that "prescription drug abuse is mostly related to prescribers and their patients, implying that limiting medically appropriate use will have any effect on reversing this disturbing trend."

Otherwise, he fears that law enforcement rather than physicians may eventually govern the use of powerful painkillers, which could lead to ineffective treatment for "suffering patients who legitimately deserve relief."

In a second editorial, Dr. Aaron M. Gilson and David E. Joranson maintain that recreational users and individuals with mental illness, rather than chronic pain patients, are the primary victims of death by opioid overdose.

The editorialists, both from the University of Wisconsin in Madison, say, "Reports indicate opioid analgesics are stolen from medicine cabinets, sold by patients, obtained from 'pill mills,' the internet, forgery, and 'doctor-shopping'." Robberies from pharmacies and hospitals are also common but underreported, they add.

Gilson and Joranson conclude, "The fact that large quantities of abused opioid analgesics are diverted directly from the supply chain, completely bypassing the involvement of ordinarily conscientious healthcare professionals, underscores the need to develop abuse-resistant medications."

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bowdenta said:
i was surpised to hear this. though they dont say how many deaths occur over a given year

i wonder which kills more, fentanyl or oxycodone

I would guess oxycodone simply because OxyContin is prescribed and illegally diverted far more frequently.

Even as a hardcore junkie, it was extremely rare for me to encounter fentanyl anywhere.

I'm sure fentanyl is more dangerous when you're talking about someone accidently ODing... but again, I just think with oxycodone being so much more widely prescribed that it's responsible for more OD's.
 
Plain single opiate overdoses are rare, at least according to the books I've read. The far majority occur when other substances are used in lieu. Alcohol, benzo's, coke, and other opiates usually push the person over the edge.

Of course its not surprising that the people who do overdose have been using for a while. This means that they are most likely addicted, experienced, and have a high tolerance. Therefore, they tend to mix substances much more liberally to get that feeling. Obviously, this doesn't mean that naive users don't mix and OD as well.

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I find it interesting that these deaths are more than coke and heroin combined. At least that's what I've read in a different article. To me, this means that the most common moa isn't iv'ing, which is what most people attribute to causing the most OD's.
 
Fried Man said:
What is the LD50 of oxycodone?
Too many variables to play into the equation.

Tolerance being one of the key. Let's just say sniffing an OC80 all to yourself in one fat gagger of a line with no tolerance won't keep you breathing very well.
 
I really don't find it hard to believe there are more overdose deaths involving opioids than coke and heroin. I mean from what I've seen/read there isn't too many yayo deaths, and the ones that there are, are from people shooting up too high of a dose. Not many people OD from snorting, I mean I've been there, and you feel like you're going to die, but to actually die I would have had to do a lot more I believe (which probably would have lead to a heart attack or stroke).

With heroin a lot of overdoses now a days are from laced dope, usually fentanyl, which I've seen around plenty in Philadelphia. And like yayo, a lot of the OD's are from people shooting up too high of a dose, usually unknowingly because the dope they got was more potent then usual, or redosing too quickly.

Fentanyl is a very dangerous drug because dosage is very hard for a lot of people to figure out. if you don't have an opiate tolerance, a small amount of fent can go a long way, and unfortunately a lot of people don't read up on the drugs they are doing, so overdosing on fent is probably a lot more common than a lot of people think.

And when it comes to oxys, everyone and their grandmom tend to do them, as they think they are okay because they are coming from the pharmacy. Little do they know it's a very potent opioid, and someone may buy a 80mg oxy thinking it's okay to take the whole thing. A 40mg oxy is too much for someone without a tolerance, so I can see how this could easily lead to overdoses.
 
dilated_pupils said:
I really don't find it hard to believe there are more overdose deaths involving opioids than coke and heroin. I mean from what I've seen/read there isn't too many yayo deaths, and the ones that there are, are from people shooting up too high of a dose. Not many people OD from snorting, I mean I've been there, and you feel like you're going to die, but to actually die I would have had to do a lot more I believe (which probably would have lead to a heart attack or stroke).

With heroin a lot of overdoses now a days are from laced dope, usually fentanyl, which I've seen around plenty in Philadelphia. And like yayo, a lot of the OD's are from people shooting up too high of a dose, usually unknowingly because the dope they got was more potent then usual, or redosing too quickly.

Fentanyl is a very dangerous drug because dosage is very hard for a lot of people to figure out. if you don't have an opiate tolerance, a small amount of fent can go a long way, and unfortunately a lot of people don't read up on the drugs they are doing, so overdosing on fent is probably a lot more common than a lot of people think.

And when it comes to oxys, everyone and their grandmom tend to do them, as they think they are okay because they are coming from the pharmacy. Little do they know it's a very potent opioid, and someone may buy a 80mg oxy thinking it's okay to take the whole thing. A 40mg oxy is too much for someone without a tolerance, so I can see how this could easily lead to overdoses.

Quit it with the freaken yayo. Why do you have to say "yayo" anyways, trying to be gangsta ?
 
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