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DrugReporter

No One Deserves to Die by Overdose

By Jill Harris, AlterNet. Posted June 12, 2009.


We must learn how to reduce the harms from drug use, including reducing the unconscionable and unnecessary number of deaths from overdose.
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The rapper Eminem recently released a new album in which he discusses the overdose that nearly killed him. At last month's Cannes Film Festival, Heath Ledger's last film was shown, reminding viewers and critics of the talent we lost when he died.

We are used to hearing about drug overdoses in the context of fast-lane inhabiting film and music stars. But in fact, deaths from drug overdoses have been rising and have reached crisis levels in our country. A newly-released report by the Drug Policy Alliance documents the extent of the problem: drug overdose is now the second-leading cause of accidental death in America, surpassing firearms-related deaths. And it's not just young people who are dying of overdoses: overdose is the number-one injury-related killer among adults aged 35-54.

This crisis isn't only about people who take illegal drugs: while heroin overdose has leveled off in many places as a result of harm reduction efforts, the greatest number of people dying from accidental overdose are those, like Heath Ledger, who used legal, prescription drugs. These drugs are typically painkillers called opioids, which can include both opium-derived drugs like morphine and codeine, and synthetics like Percodan, Percoset, Oxycontin and Vicodin. Some of the drugs involved in overdoses have been diverted to the black market and sold illegally, while others are obtained through legal prescriptions. Pain patients can misunderstand their doctors' instructions and accidentally exceed their prescribed doses of painkillers.

Many of those affected are young people. Among teenagers there has been a steep rise in misuse of prescription drugs. A December 2008 survey of high school seniors reported that more than 15 percent of high school seniors reported using prescription drugs for non-medical reasons.

There are a number of practical, low-cost interventions that could help to deal with this crisis. In 2007, New Mexico became the first state to pass a "Good Samaritan/911" law, which provides immunity from arrest and prosecution for drug use or possession to anyone who calls 911 to report an overdose. Many lives could be saved if friends of overdose victims weren't afraid of being prosecuted if the police are called to the scene. Similar legislation is now pending in several states.

Additionally, there is a drug, naloxone (also known as Narcan), which if administered following an opioid overdose can reverse the effects and restore normal breathing in two to three minutes. Naloxone has been used effectively in emergency rooms and by EMTs to reverse overdoses for over 30 years. Tens of thousands of lives could be saved if naloxone were more widely available and more people (including doctors, pharmacists and other health care professionals, as well as law enforcement professionals, many of whom are currently unfamiliar with naloxone), were trained in its use. Providing take-home naloxone to opioid users, along with instructions in its use, could significantly reduce the number of accidental overdose deaths. Naloxone itself has no abuse potential, making it a good candidate for over-the-counter availability.

Cities with programs that increase the availability of naloxone, among them Chicago, Baltimore and San Francisco, have seen their overdose rates decline dramatically. New Mexico, which for years had a high number of deaths from drug overdoses, saw a 20 percent decline in such deaths after the state's Department of Health began a naloxone distribution program in 2001.

These are common-sense solutions that would save many thousands of lives every year. But efforts to implement these solutions are hamstrung by a drug-war mentality in which there are "good" drugs and "bad" drugs and, by extension, good drug users and bad drug users, the latter seen as somehow deserving of death when they overdose. No one deserves to die by overdose. Everyone deserves a second chance at life, and to be treated compassionately by a health care system that values everyone's life.

We need to accept the reality that people will always use drugs, whether legal or illegal, prescribed or sold on the street, mood or performance enhancers, pain killers or stress reducers or sleep-enablers. We are a nation of drug users. We must learn how to reduce the harms associated with our drug use, including reducing the unconscionable and unnecessary number of deaths from overdose.


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See more stories tagged with: drug war, prescription drugs, drug policy alliance, harm reduction, drug overdose

Jill Harris is the Managing Director of Public Policy at the Drug Policy Alliance.

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"No One Deserves to Die by Overdose"
Posted by: aahpat on Jun 13, 2009 3:29 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wrong!

It is the success of the war on drugs that people die from overdose, adulteration, drug black market crime and personal destruction from criminalization. These are the actual deterrents of the war on drugs. If people don't want their lives threatened by these puritanical authoritarian government imposed mechanisms then the people need to capitulate to government threats, stay away from drug use.

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If folks would just stick to smoking pot
Posted by: xxdr_zombiexx on Jun 13, 2009 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we wouldn't have overdoses and drunk driving and heroin addiction.

Marijuana is harmless by comparison to alcohol or tobacco or heroin or cociane or 90% of pharmaceuticals.

It's safer than friggin water.

People who use HARD DRUGS have mental health issues.

Sue me for saying so, but it's fucking stupid to mess around with any substance known to be addictive.

WTF are you thinking?

Really...sue me.

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Death by overdose . . .
Posted by: countingdaisies on Jun 13, 2009 12:05 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Natural selection . . .
Here's your Darwin award.

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» RE: Death by overdose . . . Posted by: JefffromCA
OBAMA'S HEALTH PROGRAM WILL DENY MEDICAL CARE TO PEOPLE OVER 60!
Posted by: joeocho88 on Jun 14, 2009 3:55 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So what does he care if the other useless eaters die too.

HAS IT EVER OCCURRED TO YOU THAT IF THE PEOPLE WOULD NOT USE THE DRUGS IN THE FIRST PLACE, THEY WOULD NOT OVERDOSE?

ACTIONS HAVE CONSEQUENCES.

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The fatal overdoe of Paracetamol is worryingly low
Posted by: BigRon on Jun 14, 2009 5:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...according to research in the UK, a few years back. Taking a handful of Aspirin is an almost traditional way to attempt suicide... and Aspirins are regarded pretty much as the same as Paracetamol; almost every bathroom cabinet has a supply. But there's a fatal difference: if you change your mind (or never REALLY intended to kill yourself) and you took a dozen Paracetamols, getting your stomach pumped is likely to be ineffective. You've on a one way trip to liver failure, and a slow agonizing death.

So, in the UK, the law has changed. It's now illegal to sell Paracetamol in "overdose" amounts. You could always make multiple purchases from different pharmacies, if you're determined to die. But the number of accidental fatalities from Paracetamol poisoning in recent times had dropped considerably.

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back to the topic of this article...
Posted by: ellie on Jun 14, 2009 5:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the issue being argued is that there are so many meds on the market that are legally prescribed, highly addictive and can cause death quickly, that we now need narcan available over the counter...

if you look at the root of the issue, it's people can get their hands on this stuff fast and cheap through a doc rx...

if you doc shop, use multiple pharmacies and sell yourself, you are getting around laws on the books that limit how a doc prescribes this stuff...

yup, the states monitor docs rx's... patient name + doc name creates state file when rx's are filled, change a doc name and you have a 'new file' which is stored with the state pharmacy board and medical license board who do seem to talk to each other... you also short circuit pharmacy interaction software that would signal a drug conflict with pharmacy shopping...

we are a drug based society and for overworked and indoctrinated docs, a pill is easier then actually having the time to figure out what is really going on...

another thing... many of the newer drugs going to generic are starting to have dosage problems... ranging from almost none of the drug prescribed in the pill to way too much in another same pill... you can take the right dosage of the pill and still get in trouble without knowing about it...

not defending anyone, just looking at the facts of one of the ways we have this problem now, leaving the moralistic crap at the door...

the 'ask your doctor if ??? is right for you' is indoctrinated into our core society... we have allowed this 800 lb gorilla to grow in the room, without addressing the core track of how rx od's are more common...

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A Quick and Easy fix to this "problem"
Posted by: jal64 on Jun 14, 2009 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
STOP ALL ILLICIT DRUG USE! There, no more overdosing. Wasn't that easy?

Additional benefit: no more drug cartels & no more related deaths in Mexico and along our border.

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deserves
Posted by: billwald on Jun 14, 2009 9:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
de⋅serve
  /dɪˈzɜrv/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [di-zurv] Show IPA verb, -served, -serv⋅ing.
–verb (used with object)
1. to merit, be qualified for, or have a claim to (reward, assistance, punishment, etc.) because of actions, qualities, or situation: to deserve exile; to deserve charity; a theory that deserves consideration.
–verb (used without object)
2. to be worthy of, qualified for, or have a claim to reward, punishment, recompense, etc.: to reward him as he deserves; an idea deserving of study.
Origin:
1250–1300; ME deserven < AF, OF deservir, L dēservīre to devote oneself to the service of, equiv. to dē- de- + servīre to serve

Related forms:
de⋅serv⋅er, noun

Synonyms:
1. rate, warrant, justify.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.

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Doctors routinely prescribe drug combos that can be fatal.
Posted by: harpy on Jun 14, 2009 10:32 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have a friend whose doctor had prescribed double the maximum amount of estrogen, plus progesterone, plus 1 mg Xanax 3 times a day, plus Zoloft, plus her heart medication, and on top of all that blood pressure meds. She was to the point that she was absolutely hallucinating. I kept pushing her to switch doctors, and it got to the point that she left town, and went into detox for legally prescribed medication. Her new doctors took her off ALL the meds, and switched her to just something less potent for her heart problem.
These posters wanting to blame it on illegal drugs are way off the mark. The worst drugs are the ones the doctors give you.

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Compassion?
Posted by: Aquinas on Jun 14, 2009 11:01 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can't bring myself to compassion for anyone who, of his own volition, gets hooked on drugs and i don't care what the drug is. If they die they die by their own hands.
We have too many who are really sick through no fault of their own and in need of our compassion, to worry about those who knowingly play around with addictive drugs to the point where they endanger their lives.

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» Respect? Posted by: aahpat
Compassion
Posted by: huffmusic on Jun 14, 2009 11:24 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It must be fun to write snarky little comments on blog posts like "Drug addicts deserve to die from overdoses because they do it to themselves" and sit smugly in one's comfortable chair.

Anyone who understands anything about addiction knows that one of the main symptoms is the inability to stop on one's own. Addicts don't have a choice in the matter. Usually, terrible things have to happen to them (jail or asylum) before they can "choose" to quit.

I would carry the compassion even further to those who have not yet overdosed but are well on their way...the sick and silently suffering drug addict and alcoholic. Perhaps our society needs to offer more alternatives to drug and alcohol use. Until then, we should make sure that people who overdose have the proper care.

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» RE: Compassion Posted by: Aquinas
» RE: Compassion Posted by: pjnaltykins
» RE: Compassionless drug war Posted by: aahpat
Unbelievable
Posted by: electric blues on Jun 15, 2009 5:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've been reading Alternet for over a year now, and I've yet to see such callousness and cruelty from its readers. I used to actually like reading the comments.

You People are pathetic. A Darwin Award for a drug overdose? FUCK YOU! Drug addiction is a issue 10 times more complicated than you can even seem to understand. People don't use for one reason, and people don't use a shitload of hard drugs without a reason. And the difference between a good dose and a lethal one is small. Not to mention that their is absolutely no quality control in ilicit drugs, and the potency may vary over 10%, enough to kill you in certain situations. Far more deaths in this drug war are caused by backwards policy and puritanical belief in punishment for sinners, err sorry addicts, than sutpid drug users. As a matter of a fact to even sugest the darwin award it is fucking pathetic. Go look at the real world for once.

Alot of the "addicts", and overdoses you heard of are the under medicated. People who have legitimate medical problems and use opiates for relief. If you had ever knew anyone in pain you'd know the hassle of pain management doctors, and why so many people have to find illegal means for their habit. Of the adicts I've met, the vast majority that use for extended periods were pain paitents.

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America's Uncivilized Drug War
Posted by: aahpat on Jun 17, 2009 6:25 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Addiction is a disease. A genetically based disease. Criminal persecution of citizens based on medical and genetic distinctions is no different from Hitler persecuting people for birth defects and mental illness.

Addiction is often triggered in an individual when they are very young children. Long before they are cognizant of or responsible for their intoxicant choices. Before they have access to drugs. Or for the meds prescribed to them for whatever purpose.

Many overdoses are a result under-medication imposed by the drug war intrusion into the doctor patient relationship. Tell Barack Obama to get the freakin DEA out of the pain treatment business.

All of this aside, there is no rationale for criminalizing any of these users. Criminalization and judicial intrusion into the medical treatment of Americans for diseases and ailments, including addiction, is uncivilized.

Persecuting Americans for addiction shows how far down the road toward fascism America has already gone.

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» RE: America's Uncivilized Drug War Posted by: pjnaltykins
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