Oxycontin ® Diversion and Abuse
The abuse of oxycodone products in general has increased in recent
years. In April 2000, The Journal of the American Medical Association
(JAMA) published a study, which examined two data collection sources.
The DEA Automation of Reports and Consolidated Orders System (ARCOS)
data tracks the distribution of oxycodone and other opioid analgesics
and the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) Medical Examiner (ME)
and Emergency Department (ED) data ascertained the health consequences
associated with its abuse from 1990 to 1996. The JAMA study found
a 23 percent increase in the medical use of oxycodone with no corresponding
increase in the illicit abuse of the drug. However, 1998 DAWN ME
data reported a 93 percent increase in oxycodone mentions between
1997 and 1998 and the number of oxycodone-related DAWN ED mentions
increased 32.4 percent from 1997 (4,857) to 1999 (6,429).
Oxycontin ® is designed to be swallowed whole; however, abusers ingest
the drug in a variety of ways. Oxycontin ® abusers often chew the
tablets or crush the tablets and snort the powder. Because oxycodone
is water soluble, crushed tablets can be dissolved in water and
the solution injected. The latter two methods lead to the rapid
release and absorption of oxycodone. The alcohol and drug treatment
staff at the Mountain Comprehensive Care Center, Prestonsburg, Kentucky,
reports individuals who have never injected drugs are using Oxycontin ®
intravenously and they have never seen a drug "proliferate
like Oxycontin ® has since May 2000." The staff at this center
has over 90 cumulative years' experience conducting drug evaluations.
Oxycontin ® and heroin have similar effects; therefore, both drugs
are attractive to the same abuser population. Oxycontin ® is sometimes
referred to as "poor man's heroin", despite the high price
it commands at the street level. A 40 mg tablet of Oxycontin ® by
prescription costs approximately $4 or $400 for a 100-tablet bottle
in a retail pharmacy. Street prices vary depending on geographic
location, but generally Oxycontin ® sells for between 50 cents and
$1 per milligram. Thus, the same 100-tablet bottle purchased for
$400 at a retail pharmacy can sell for $2,000 to $4,000 illegally.
Oxycontin ® is, however, relatively inexpensive for those covered
by health insurance, since the insurance provider covers most costs
associated with doctor visits and the prescription. Unfortunately,
many Oxycontin ® abusers whose health insurance will no longer pay
for prescriptions and who cannot afford the high street-level prices
are attracted to heroin.
Opioids, Pain, and Addiction
Addiction to opioids used for legitimate medical purposes under
a qualified physician's care is rare. According to the National
Institute on Drug Abuse, however, many physicians limit prescribing
powerful opioid pain medications because they believe patients may
become addicted to the drugs. Recent evidence suggests that, unlike
opioid abusers, most healthy, nondrug-abusing patients do not report
euphoria after being administered opioids, possibly because their
level of pain may reduce some of the opioid's euphoric effects making
patients less likely to become abusers.
Source: National Institute of Mental Health
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