I stumbled across your site as I was looking for answers on my sons overdose. A year ago yesterday we buried my youngest son 32, from an overdose of Heroin and Klonopin.....maybe the questions I have cant be answered I am not sure...He was prescribed Klonopin from a doctor after already misusing a previous prescription of Klonopin and Ativan...I know there are quite a few opiate addicts that have found this combination to be the ultimate high...why would a doctor re up the script if the first scripts were misused and plus knowing my son was a recovering heroin addict....he had been out of rehab 3 weeks when he died after getting his first paycheck and refilling the script for the klonopin...please somebody help me understand the draw of this lethal combination
First I would like to say how sorry I am, I've experienced loss, but I can't imagine how painful this must have been and still be for you, I'm so sorry.
None of us can tell you why the doctor made the decision he made, many addicts become very good at lying and manipulating doctors for their own ends, I am certainly not innocent of manipulating doctors and deceiving them to obtain drugs. Or perhaps he was simply negligent, or maybe it was simple human misjudgement. All three are common. Only the doctor responsible could possibly give you the answer.
Combining Benzodiazapine's like klonopin with opioids like heroin is fairly common, and extremely dangerous. They potentate each other, meaning they can increase the pleasurable effects of the drug. However benzodiazapines can also ease the withdrawal symptoms. As someone else said, it is also very possible that his overdose was caused due to a significant decrease of his tolerance. So many addicts have died shortly after leaving rehab not fully appreciating how much less tolerant they are to dosages that previously would have amounted to very little. It's something that really must be emphasised upon leaving rehab. As such it's not impossible he would have died without the klonopin at all.
As for why he did it, the addicted mind is very good at drawing you back into using, especially with opiates, which is the class of drug I have the most experience with as far as addiction goes. Maybe in his mind he felt like celebrating or that he earned it, or maybe he felt depressed, or just felt like he desperately wanted to use, or perhaps he felt this time he would be able to control his usage. Once again, all are common. The addicted mind will come up with any and every excuse to use more. Heroin can make you feel so good when you feel so down, For an addict experiencing all the pains life can bring, especially while in withdrawal or post acute withdrawal syndrome, which itself can bring upon depression, the peace that heroin gives your mind can be too tempting to resist.
I don't know what it's like to be in your shoes, but I do know the other side. I'll never forget the look in my mothers eyes when I was brought to hospital having overdosed, it's one of the only things I do remember from that event, everything else is a blur from moments after I used to waking up in the hospital. Depression makes you selfish, as does addiction, it's easy to forget how much harm your own death would bring to those that you love and who love you.
But it's not impossible to go through withdrawal, or to stay clean, so long as you want it bad enough.
I hope any of what I or the others here have said might help you better understand your sons death, and again I'm truly sorry.
Take care.