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After
having back surgery in May 2001, Vicky, 34, was prescribed OxyContin,
a powerful pain reliever. But the drug did more than merely alleviate
her discomfort. The Tennessee native was out of bed within a few
days and in a state of euphoria that made it seem as if she would
never sleep again. Bursting with energy, she began cooking more
elaborate meals, kept the house spotless, lavished attention on
her husband and 6-year old daughter, "I felt like Superwife,"
recalls Vicky. Deep down she knew that all the energy was coming
from her OxyContin - and that maybe she was beginning to love it
a little too much. But was she an addict? No way. A former high
school valedictorian and homecoming queen, Vicky didn't smoke or
drink. And she'd been prescribed painkillers before and had been
just fine. "I knew I wasn't taking OxyContin for the back pain
anymore," she says, "but I figured I'd just stop once
the month-long prescription ran out."
But after four days
without the drug, Vicky (who doesn't want her last name used)
was bedridden with fatigue and flu-like symptoms. "At this point I pretty much knew I
was addicted to OxyContin," she says, "I wish my doctor
had told me from the beginning that this would happen. But I was
too into the drug to bring up this concern with him." Instead
she asked for a refill, saying she was still in pain from her surgery.
Her physician gladly obliged, not bothering to ask Vicky if she
was experiencing any signs of dependence or any side effects from
the drug.
Three refills later, Vicky caller
her physician to make an appointment to get a fourth - but found
out he was booked for three weeks. Desperate for her fix, she turned
to a street dealer, referred by a relative who occasionally popped
pills for kicks. For months, after church on Sundays, Vicky would
make excuses to drive alone - and once even with her daughter -
to a run-down drug shack to get the medication. And since her tolerance
for OxyContin had gown so much that taking the pills orally couldn't
keep her pain-free and energized, Vicky started crushing and snorting
the drug.
To get the cash, Vicky
secretly drained the money her family had saved for a down payment
on a new house and sold some of her jewelry, spending $75,000
in total on her addiction. Her husband, who suspected she was
abusing OxyContin but trusted her when she said no, put two and
two together when ne noticed that the down payment had disappeared
- and threatened to divorce her.
"I compromised everything," says Vicky, who finally managed
to kick her habit in August 2002 at the Waismann Institute, a detox facility
in Beverly Hills, California. Since then she's worked on undoing
the damage she wreaked on her family. "I feel terrible
that I lied to my daughter and husband," she says. "I
could have lost them, and even my life."
Vicky isn't the only
woman who's gotten in trouble with drugs she first got from her
doctor. In 2001 nearly 5 million Americans said they'd used prescription
pain relievers, sedatives, or stimulants for "non-medical"reasons (meaning
for something other than their intended purpose, such as for the
"high"), according to the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), a public health agency
within the Department of Health and Human Services. And while people
who pop pills once or twice for kicks don't always end up addicted
(which is defined as having an uncontrollable craving for the drug),
others aren't so lucky. According to SAMHSA, emergency rooms across
the country are seeing more and more people who've overdosed on
these pills or taken them in life-threatening combinations with
other substances, such as alcohol; and ER visits involving the
abuse of pain relievers - OxyContin, for example - more than doubled,
to nearly 100,000, from 1994 to 2001.
Prescription addicts
aren't your stereotypical junkies. "Many are 'unwitting' addicts," says
Rod Colvin, author of Prescription Drug Addiction: The Hidden Epidemic.
"They have no history of drug abuse but begin taking a drug
for legitimate reasons, as directed by their doctor." And
since these drugs are FDA-approved, many patients assume they're
safe. But sometimes they aren't - and many doctors, nurses, and
pharmacies aren't doing enough to protect patients, says Colvin. |
Women are especially
at risk for prescription-drug abuse, largely because they're more
likely to be exposed to these medications. Why? Because in general,
women are more comfortable seeking medical attention for discomfort,
depression, and anxiety than men are, says Michael M. Miller, M.D.,
chairman of the public policy committee of the American Society
of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) and medical director of NewStart alcohol
and drug treatment program at Meriter Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin.
The result: Women, while the make up the minority of abusers of
alcohol, constitute approximately half of prescription-drug addicts,
estimates Miller.
What makes these drugs so quietly
addictive for women? And why aren't doctors, hospitals, and pharmacies
doing more to protect patients?
Powerful - But Dangerous - New
Prescriptions
While prescription
addiction is hardly new, it's become way more widespread than
the "sleeping pill"
habit Marilyn Monroe and other stars had in the past. Today dozens
of brands of potentially additive pills are prescribed for a range
of ailments. According to Colvin, there are three main types: pain
relievers, also called narcotics or opioids because they're derived
from opium (OxyContin, codeine, and Lortab); sedatives (Valium,
Xanax, and Ativan), which are usually prescribed for anxiety, panic
attacks, and insomnia; and stimulants (Ritalin, Dexedrine), which
are used to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, and
sometimes to help women lost weight. What makes these drugs addictive
is their ability to mimic the body's own natural feel-good chemicals
(like endorphins and dopamine) and this make the user feel calmer
or more energized, depending on the drug. The problem is, when the
body gets these chemicals from an outside source, it gradually makes
fewer of its own. So when you try to stop taking these drugs after
a few weeks on them, the sudden drop in endorphin and dopamine levels
can trigger symptoms of withdrawal, such as depression, anxiety,
chills, and insomnia. In rare cases, withdrawal can initiate brain
seizures, which can result in death, says Michael Fleming, a family
physician in Shreveport, Louisiana, and president-elect of the American
Academy of Family Physicians.
That's not to say
that these drugs should just be taken off the market. "The FDA approved these
drugs for a reason: They allow people in pain or with anxiety or
other disorders to lead normal lives," points out Colvin. But
Stuart Gitlow, a psychiatrist and a delegate from the American Society
of Addiction Medicine to the American Medical Association (AMA),
believes that for most patients these drugs should be used only
for short periods (no more than a few weeks). "If you're having
a root canal, three days of pain reliever is fine; or if you get
anxious every time you fly in an airplane, taking one sedative is
fine," he says. "But unless a patient isn't responding
to other medications, habit-forming drugs aren't good solutions
for long-term problems, like if you're in chronic pain or constantly
anxious. That's because the longer you're on these drugs, the more
difficult it is to stop taking them."
Before prescribing
addictive medications, doctors should carefully screen patients
to see if they're good candidates for them - a task many physicians
fail at, says Gitlow.
"Given that 10 to 20 percent of Americans will develop a substance
abuse disorder, including alcoholism, at some point in their lives,
I think any doctor prescribing addictive drugs should do so carefully,"
he says. Background checks are especially important, because a predisposition
for addiction is often genetic. "People who have a first-degree
relative with a substance-abuse disorder, like alcoholism, have
a seven-to-eightfold-increased likelihood of having substance-abuse
disorder themselves," says Gitlow. "That family history
is important info for doctors to know, and unfortunately not enough
[of them] are asking for it."
Once doctors prescribe
these medications, many don't even tell patients they're habit-forming,
says Colvin.
"I've spoken with many recovering addicts who had no idea they
were taking an addictive drug until they were really in trouble."
Why aren't doctors warning patients? "They're too busy and
they assume it won't be a problem," Colvin explains. "In
most cases they're right. But when they're wrong, the results can
be catastrophic."
For more information, please call (310) 205-0808 or (888) 987-HOPE or send us a confidential email.
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