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Pain Medicine Use Has Nearly Doubled
By The Associated Press, Washington DC
Retail sales of five leading painkillers nearly doubled over
the last eight years, reflecting a surge in use by patients
nationwide who are living in a world of pain, according to
a new Associated Press analysis of federal drug prescription
data. The analysis reveals that oxycodone usage is migrating
out of Appalachia to areas such as Columbus, Ohio, and Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., and significant numbers of codeine users
are living in many suburban neighborhoods around the country.
The amount of five major painkillers sold at retail establishments
rose 90 percent between 1997 and 2005, according to Drug Enforcement
Administration figures. More than 200,000 pounds of codeine,
morphine, oxycodone, hydrocodone and meperidine were purchased
at retail stores during 2005, the most recent year represented
in the data. That is enough to give more than 300 milligrams
of painkillers to every person in the country.
Oxycodone, the chemical used in OxyContin, is responsible
for most of the increase. Oxycodone use jumped nearly six-fold
between 1997 and 2005. The drug gained notoriety as ''hillbilly
heroin,'' often bought and sold illegally in Appalachia. But
its highest rates of sale now occur in places such as suburban
St. Louis and Fort Lauderdale. ''What we're seeing now is
the rest of the nation catching up to where we were,'' said
Robert Walker, a researcher at the University of Kentucky
Center on Drug and Alcohol Research.
The world of pain extends beyond big cities and involves
more than oxycodone. In Appalachia, retail sales of hydrocodone
-- sold mostly as Vicodin -- are the highest in the nation.
Nine of the 10 areas with the highest per-capita sales are
in mostly rural parts of West Virginia, Kentucky or Tennessee.
Dr. Jeffrey Gordon, director of the blood and cancer center
at Day Kimball Hospital in Putnam, Conn., said Vicodin is
a popular painkiller to give patients after surgery, and many
doctors are familiar with it. ''Over the past 10 years, there
has been much better education in the medical community to
... ask if people are having pain and to better diagnose and
treat it,'' Gordon said.
Suburbs are not immune to the explosion. While retail sales
of codeine have fallen by one- quarter since 1997, some of
the highest rates of sales are in communities around Kansas
City, Mo., Nashville, Tenn., and on New York's Long Island.
The DEA figures analyzed by the AP include nationwide sales
and distribution of drugs by hospitals, retail pharmacies,
doctors and teaching institutions. Federal investigators study
the same data trying to identify illegal prescription patterns.
An AP investigation found these reasons for the increase:
--The population is getting older. As age increases, so does
the need for pain medications. In 2000, there were 35 million
people older than 65. By 2020, the Census Bureau estimates
the number of elderly in the U.S. will reach 54 million. --Drugmakers
have embarked on unprecedented marketing campaigns. Spending
on drug marketing has zoomed from $11 billion in 1997 to nearly
$30 billion in 2005, congressional investigators found. Profit
margins among the leading companies routinely have been three
and four times higher than in other Fortune 500 industries.
--A major change in pain management philosophy is now in
its third decade. Doctors who once advised patients that pain
is part of the healing process began reversing course in the
early 1980s; most now see pain management as an important
ingredient in overcoming illness. Retired Staff Sgt. James
Fernandez, 54, of Fredericksburg, Va., survived two helicopter
crashes and Gulf War Syndrome over 20 years in the Marine
Corps. He remains disabled from his service-related injuries
and takes the equivalent of nine painkillers containing oxycodone
every day. ''It's made a difference,'' he said. ''I still
have bad days, but it's under control.'' Such stories should
hearten longtime advocates of wider painkiller use, such as
Russell Portenoy, head of New York's Beth Israel pain management
department. But they have not. ''I'm concerned and many people
are concerned, that the pendulum is swinging too far back,''
he said. Consider:
--More people are abusing prescription painkillers because
the medications are more available. The vast majority of people
with prescriptions use the drugs safely. But the number of
emergency room visits from painkiller abuse has increased
more than 160 percent since 1995, according to the government.
--Spooked by high-profile arrests and prosecutions by state
and federal authorities, many pain-management specialists
now say they offer guidance and support to patients but will
not write prescriptions, even for the sickest people. The
increase in painkiller retail sales continues to rise, but
only barely. There was a 150 percent increase in volume in
2001. Four years later, the year-to-year increase was barely
2 percent.
--People who desperately need strong painkillers are forced
to go long distances -- often to a different state - to find
doctors willing to prescribe high doses of medicine. Siobhan
Reynolds, widow of a New Mexico patient who needed large amounts
of painkillers for a connective tissue disorder, said she
routinely drove her late husband to see an accommodating doctor
in Oklahoma.
Perhaps no place illustrates the trends and consequences
for the world of pain better than Myrtle Beach, S.C., a sprawling
community of strip malls, hotels and bars perched along a
60-mile strip of sand on the Atlantic Ocean. The metro area
is home to 350,000 people but sees more than 14 million tourists
annually, drawn to its warm water, golf courses and shopping.
During the eight-year period reflected in government figures,
oxycodone distribution increased 800 percent in the area of
Myrtle Beach, partly due to a campaign by Purdue Pharmaceuticals
of Stamford, Conn. The privately held company has pleaded
guilty to lying to patients, physicians and federal regulators
about the addictive nature of the drug. Use of other drugs
soared in the area, too: Hydrocodone use increased 217 percent;
morphine distribution went up 180 percent; even meperidine,
most commonly sold as Demerol, jumped 20 percent.
It is no small wonder that federal authorities suspected
the area was home to a notorious ''pill mill,'' or a clinic
that dispenses prescription medication without verifying that
it's needed. The U.S. attorney for South Carolina secured
a 58- count indictment in June 2002 against seven physicians
and one employee of the Comprehensive Care and Pain Management
Center, a nondescript storefront on Myrtle Beach's main drag.
Tipped off by local pharmacists concerned about an increase
in the volume of painkiller prescriptions, the federal investigation
created a furor in the medical profession. The owner, D. Michael
Woodward, was sentenced to 15 years in the case and has relinquished
his license. A second physician, Deborah Bordeaux, had worked
at the clinic less than two months before quitting in disgust.
Bordeaux, now serving a two-year prison term, was threatened
with a 100-year sentence if she did not help the prosecution.
Officials with the Justice Department and DEA would not discuss
what some activists say is a ''war on doctors.''
Reynolds, the widow who drove her late husband hundreds of
miles for his pills, became an activist after the Myrtle Beach
indictments. She contributed money to appeal some of the criminal
convictions in South Carolina and started the Pain Relief
Network, an advocacy organization for people living in pain.
She believes the doctors sent to prison were railroaded. ''It
was a witch hunt,'' she said.
Bordeaux's husband, Edworth Swaim, agrees. A retired U.S.
Postal Service employee, Swaim believes his wife was sentenced
to two years because she would not turn on her former colleagues.
Even though Bordeaux had worked at the clinic less than two
months and eventually sued over what she alleged was rampant
Medicare fraud, he said she did not stand a chance of avoiding
prison. ''She wasn't guilty of anything, so she wasn't going
to plead to anything,'' Swaim said. ''She was absolutely railroaded,
made an example of. I can't tell you how angry I am.''
Myrtle Beach physicians are not convinced that the ''Myrtle
Beach Eight,'' as they became known, were innocent. A Myrtle
Beach internist who also works in addiction medicine, Brian
Adler, said physicians were flooded with patients seeking
pain medicine after the clinic was shut down. The community
has a slightly higher-than-average number of older people
and relatively high numbers of people between 21 and 64 who
describe themselves as disabled. ''There's a significant problem
with narcotics in this area,'' Adler said. After the pain
management clinic closed, ''all those folks were like rats,
scurrying from a burning building, trying to get their fix.''
Other physicians were concerned about patients with legitimate
needs for painkillers. The federal bust raised the stakes.
When radio commentator Rush Limbaugh settled a federal case
charging him with illegally obtaining painkillers, he did
not get prison time. Neither did NFL star Brett Favre, who
publicly acknowledged an addiction to Vicodin that he obtained
legally. To pain management specialists, they were being blamed
for everyone's addiction. The DEA cites 108 prosecutions of
physicians during the past four years; 83 pleaded guilty or
no contest, while 16 others were convicted by juries. Eight
cases are pending, and one physician is being sought as a
fugitive. In congressional testimony, the agency's deputy
assistant administrator, Joseph T. Rannazzisi, estimated that
fewer than 1 percent of the nation's physicians -- under 9,000
-- illegally provide prescription drugs to patients. He told
lawmakers it is far more common for people to illegally obtain
prescription drugs from friends and family members. ''It is
not merely illegal but could feed or lead to an addiction
and place that loved one in a life-threatening situation,''
Rannazzisi said.
It is impossible to reliably measure painkiller abuse. A
2004 government study estimated between 2 million and 3 million
doses of codeine, hydrocodone and oxycodone are stolen annually
from pharmacies, distributors and drug manufacturers. The
AP's analysis only included retail sales and did not include
estimates of diverted pharmaceuticals. John Charles, director
of medical affairs at the Grand Strand Regional Medical Center
in Myrtle Beach, practices pain management. A few years ago,
Charles said, he took a drastic step to reduce his potential
legal risks: He stopped prescribing painkillers. The decision
gave him peace of mind, but he does not expect there to be
less of a need for painkillers or physicians who prescribe
them. ''People with cancer are surviving longer, elderly people
are living longer,'' Charles said. ''So, physicians are walking
a fairly fine line. We're walking a narrow path. And I think
we'll continue to see it for a while.''
Associated Press writers Dave Collins in Hartford,
Conn., and Samira Jafari in Pikeville, Ky., contributed to
this story.
On the Net: Pain Relief Network, http://www.painreliefnetwork.org
Drug Enforcement Administration, http://www.usdoj.gov/dea
Drug Abuse Warning Network, http://dawninfo.samhsa.gov/
American Academy of Pain Management, http://www.aapainmanage.org/
August 20, 2007
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