Not All Drug Abuse Is From Health Providers and Oxycodone

Not All Drug Abuse Is From Health Providers and Oxycodone

http://www.anesthesiologynews.com/Commentary/Article/10-16/Not-All-Drug-Abuse-Is-From-Health-Providers-and-Oxycodone/38050/ses=ogst?

Over the last few months, there has been an explosion of interest in the legislature to rein in oxycodone and to limit its use for pain management. Health care providers are painted as the major culprits who are causing an explosion of drug abuse, as reported by the media. Many excellent physicians in the field of pain medicine have been put under the microscope regarding their management of narcotics prescribed for certain patients, including those with terminal disease pain. This is not to say that health care providers should not be policed with medically based data on how to balance pain management with narcotics and nonnarcotic modalities.

The media is also filled with reports of raids on methamphetamine laboratories in our communities. This ongoing battle with illicit drugs has become a major political issue at both the local and federal level. Political debate has focused on how oxycodone and fentanyl are overprescribed, diverted and at the heart of our drug problem.

Public health care providers and politicians may not be aware of a more overwhelming supply chain of illicit addictive drugs. These drugs that are flooding our streets are being manufactured not in a debilitated trailer in rural America, but in a factory at an industrial level. Want to get your hands on the latest designer street drug or slightly tweaked version of fentanyl? It’s as easy as typing “Research Chemicals” into Google. You can scroll through an endless list of websites such as Alibaba.com and Guidechem.com, to name a few. Some of these offer free samples, bargain prices and home delivery by Express Mail. All you have to do is wire a few thousand dollars or use your credit card with an English-speaking customer service representative, and you get drugs delivered to your door. No need to doctor-shop or use criminal drug dealers.

 

This globalized marketplace, in which Chinese chemical companies pump out large volumes of ever-changing isomers that are too new to be banned in the United States or internationally, leaves our local and federal law enforcement officials virtually powerless to slow the influx of synthetic drugs. Those companies also manufacture some of the precursors of illicit drugs, which are used by many of the major drug cartels. In a country that has perfected the art of internet censorship and electronic spying, the open online drug market is a blatant example of what law enforcement has said is China’s reluctance to take action, as it has today become the major supplier of deadly synthetic drugs.

Since 2008, the number of new psychoactive substances added to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime has soared more than eightfold to 541, far more than the 244 drugs listed as controlled substances that are sold on these websites as “legal highs,” “research chemicals,” “not for human use” and fertilizers.

Our local governments have to deal with these temporarily legal substances until legislation can be passed. A great example is “spice” or “synthetic marijuana,” which flooded smoke shops and gas stations and was sold alongside tobacco products. Some of the most popular names included K2, Yucatan Fire, Skunk and Moon Rocks. Spice was often promoted as being “natural,” but in reality it was plant material treated with manufactured psychoactive chemicals and synthetic cannabinoid compounds. Spice users and poison control centers across the country have reported rapid heart rates, agitation, confusion, hallucinations, self-destructive behavior and psychosis. These agents have triggered heart attacks, strokes and permanent neurologic damage.

Bath salts are another drug that has triggered a major drug problem and has filled our ERs and ICUs. Websites market these compounds as keyboard cleaners, plant food and jewelry cleaners. The main component of most bath salts is methylenedioxypyrovalerone or new derivatives to skirt the law. Popular types of bath salts include “Ivory Wave,” “Purple Wave,” “Vanilla Sky” and “Bliss.” These drugs trigger agitation, paranoia, hallucinations, hypertension, tachycardia and suicidal thinking. A major danger is depression or suicidal behavior that can last even after the stimulatory effects of the drugs have worn off. There have been cases of suicides reported a few days after use.

Flakka (or alpha-PVP), which is manufactured in China, is sold by over 150 companies. It is a highly addictive synthetic drug that has overwhelmed hospital systems, some of which report 20 Flakka-related emergencies a day. Many deaths also have been attributed to this cheaply priced drug. Some of the dealers even guarantee that if your shipment is seized, they will send you another package. To elude U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents, the shipment may be labeled as industrial solvent or cleaner. A kilogram can be purchased for $1,500 online and sold for many-fold more on our streets.

These chemical companies may be responsible for the explosion in narcotic overdose deaths that have affected all social classes across the country. The media is filled with reports of fentanyl deaths and ever-increasing drug-related deaths. This has triggered the wide availability of Narcan (naloxone, Adapt Pharma) to first responders and the public. However, much of the problem may be triggered by the widespread availability of industrially produced fentanyl analogs.

The Drug Enforcement Administration is working to classify these specific analogs. An example of the frustration that law enforcement must deal with is a compound called furanylfentanyl. Once it is listed as illegal, the laboratories in China will be automatically changing the formula to come up with the next analog acetyl fentanyl drug configuration.

What can we do as health care providers who must deal with these problems on a daily basis in our ERs, operating rooms and ICUs? I believe that education is a key factor. We need to educate our political leaders about any and all industrially produced, addictive drugs and their terrible effects on our society. Our national government should address this problem with authorities in China. At the grassroots level, health care providers must educate the public on these dangerous, synthetic drugs with widely varying potencies.

2 Responses

  1. I do not know how to help with this problem. We have such powerful people hurting the chronically ill people. They treat you like your a drug addict. I have to go to a palliative care and a pain clinic to receive 90 hydrocodone 10-325 a month. I have to go one month to palliative care about 4,000. Then once month pain clinic about 4,000 a month. You have to sign away your rights if you go to emergency room that the pain clinic will tell the doctor in the emergency room what medicines the hospital can give you. This is not right. All because I hurt so bad I can’t get around. I’m 68 years old I have been sick since 2006 .im disabled senior with no one to help me. Can’t afford an attorney. I have no rights in this country people treat you like you have no value in this country. I’m in Washington state Olympia, WA area. Do not come to this place if you have chronic pain.
    Can anyone tell me anything to help, please.

  2. Thanks again pharmacist Steve,for a very informative article.People need to be more aware of these dangerous and deadly synthetic poisons.It is education that will benefit many,and save lives.It would also be helpful if the government in China would take some responsible action to stop this madness on their end of this,where the bulk of these poisons originates.
    In the midst of this vast and complex problem it is more understandable to me now how the DEA may have confused the natural and safe herb kratom with these nasty deadly synthetics.The fact that kratom has been sold in some of these gas stations and head shops alongside these other products,has been an understandable contributor to the misconceptions that have been held by dea.
    As a outspoken person for the value of natural herbal products,I really want to see this confusion cleared up,or fear it could result in the baby being thrown out with the bath water,as an old saying goes.Hopefully the current efforts by millions of kratom users to clarify through public comments,and the educational efforts of excellent organizations such as the botanical educational alliance and the American kratom association,as well as info from credible researchers,will help the public and the regulatory agencies to understand that the safe and natural herb kratom,has nothing to do with synthetically manufactured poison drugs.
    The poison from China must be stopped,while at the same time the value of natural herbs needs to known and appreciated,and remain legal.

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