This article made me sad. It sucks that we live in a world where something like marijuana - a non-addictive, harmless substance - is illegal, while prescription drug companies are nothing less than pushers with office buildings and expensive advertisements instead of street corners and pagers. It's sad that we live in a world where life itself is so depressing that a person would rather sink into a drug induced haze than face the reality of their existence and that the only way people know how to deal with physical pain is to numb it with narcotic drugs. As a person with severe back problems, I know what it's like to want to escape physical pain, but I have never surrendered to taking pain killers. I have also never bought into the idea that there is a drug that can fix any problem. Drugs don't fix most problems, in most cases they just make you forget about them momentarily. But the problems return and the drugs need to be taken again, and before you know it, you're an old junkie. Thanks Phizer. Thanks Roche. Thanks U.S. Government. Remember kids, say no to marijuana and yes to OxyContin.
America's elderly face growing drug addiction problemPosted by Maria at May 17, 2006 04:45 PM | TrackBackBy Toni Clarke
BOSTON (Reuters) - When Patrick Gallagher first began nodding off at dinner, his family thought it was a symptom of old age. Their fears grew as it worsened.
Withdrawing from the world at age 64, Gallagher was addicted to a cocktail of alcohol and prescription painkillers.
"My whole life was centered around making sure I had an adequate supply of drugs and alcohol," said the former instructor at the University of Miami.
Gallagher, of Jensen Beach, Florida, is an elderly substance abuser, a fast-growing group in the United States as baby boomers age.
A government survey estimates that the number of adults aged 50 or older with substance abuse problems will double to 5 million in 2020 from 2.5 million in 1999, in large part due to their comfort with prescription drugs.
"There is a huge concern that what we're going to be seeing is a tidal wave of seriously affected substance abusers in later life," said Frederic Blow, an associate professor at the University of Michigan Medical School who specializes in geriatric substance abuse.
Unlike their predecessors, the Woodstock generation is comfortable taking medications for a wide range of problems, including pain, insomnia, depression and anxiety. As a result, they are more vulnerable to substance abuse in later life, experts say.
Rush Limbaugh, the politically conservative, 55-year-old talk show host, who was charged last month with prescription drug fraud in connection with his addiction to painkillers, is representative of the new kind of patient showing up in treatment centers and emergency rooms, experts say.
'PAIN-FREE'
So-called "late onset" substance abuse is often linked to medical problems and the emotional traumas that can accompany old age, from isolation to the death of friends and family.
Alcohol remains the most commonly abused substance in the elderly, followed by prescription painkillers such as OxyContin, made by Purdue Pharama, and Vicodin, by Abbott Laboratories Inc , and anti-anxiety pills such as Valium, by Roche, and Xanax, by Pfizer.
Of 495,859 emergency-room hospital visits in the United States in 2004 for the non-medical use of pharmaceuticals, 32,556 were by people aged 55 to 64 years old and 31,203 were by people older than 65, according to the first national government survey of its kind.
Gallagher's problems began when he began taking OxyContin and oxycodone to treat serious back pain.
OxyContin is a sustained-release version of oxycodone, whose brand names include Percocet and Percodan, both made by Endo Pharmaceuticals and whose abuse potential is similar to that of morphine.
"I felt tremendous," he said. "I thought I'd died and gone to heaven because I was pain-free."
Gradually, however, those positive feelings gave way to lethargy and crippling depression. He needed more and more pills to gain the same effect and he increased his alcohol intake dramatically to help.
"My life became unmanageable," said Gallagher, who entered treatment about a year ago after his family intervened to help him. Now aged 65, he manages his pain through alternative, holistic methods such as acquatherapy and massage.
ELDERLY ILLICIT DRUG USE
It's not just prescription drug abuse that is on the rise. Illicit drug use is also increasing, though the absolute numbers are still relatively small.
Of 383,350 emergency admissions nationwide for cocaine abuse in 2004, 10,790 were patients between the ages of 55 and 64, while 1,503 were aged 65 and older.
"We are beginning to see an increase in heroin and cocaine addiction at the front-end of the baby boom wave," said Carol Colleran, executive vice president of public policy and national affairs at Hanley Center, a treatment program in West Palm Beach and the author of "Aging and Addiction."
"The increase is slight yet, but it begs the question as to whether that figure is going to increase dramatically if the baby boomers revert back in retirement to the drugs they tended to use in their college years."
While pharmaceutical companies are introducing new medications to combat pain, anxiety and sleeplessness, supposedly without the potential for abuse, those drugs can carry their own problems.
Ambien, the insomnia drug made by Sanofi-Aventis cited by U.S. Rep. Patrick Kennedy as the cause of his recent car crash near the U.S. capitol, has been blamed recently for causing blackouts in patients that have led to car crashes, sleepwalking and binge eating.
"The drug companies want you to believe their drugs are safe," said Blow, "but I think I think we are just going to see new problems in the future."
May 18, 2006
A 67-year-old reputed organized crime figure was convicted of murder yesterday for killing his brother-in-law during a fight at a restaurant in Brooklyn.
The man, Andrew Gargiulo, who once forfeited $1.5 million as part of a plea bargain in a bookmaking case involving the Genovese crime family, was supported in court by dozens of friends and family members, many of whom wept and expressed their disbelief. Justice Plummer E. Lott of State Supreme Court ordered Mr. Gargiulo to jail until his sentencing, scheduled for June 7.
"Your crime is no different than any other defendant convicted of murder," Justice Lott said, rejecting a request for bail and adding, "No amount of money would keep him here."
Mr. Gargiulo, who faces 25 years to life in prison when sentenced, listened impassively.
During the trial, he had delivered an animated account of self-defense, rolling on the courtroom floor to re-enact the fight with his wife's brother, Preston J. Geritano. He said he was afraid of Mr. Geritano, whose behavior had turned erratic. His lawyers played a recording of Mr. Geritano making violent threats.
On April 22, 2004, Mr. Geritano confronted Mr. Gargiulo with a stickball bat at Amici, a restaurant in Bay Ridge, and Mr. Gargiulo stabbed him with a hunting knife concealed in a scabbard attached to his garter sock.
Jurors were told little of Mr. Gargiulo's past, though prosecutors hinted at a subtext to the killing: The moment Mr. Geritano had raised a stick against a made member of the Genovese crime family, the code of the Mafia demanded his death.
"He crossed the line," the prosecutor, Kyle Reeves, said in his closing on Tuesday. Mr. Reeves told jurors that Mr. Geritano's behavior did not warrant his killing, saying that "every person, whether they're a lowlife or the president of the United States, is protected by the law."
A lawyer for Mr. Gargiulo, Albert J. Brackley, said in his closing that witnesses' accounts of the fight were contradictory. "Of all the types of testimony," Mr. Brackley said, "the most unreliable is eyewitness."
Jurors sent out a note yesterday with a long list of requests, including a legal definition of intent as it applied to Mr. Gargiulo's mind-set before and during the fight.
After the verdict, Justice Lott ordered all but the defendant's immediate family from the courtroom. Mr. Gargiulo's daughter later emerged wearing his suit jacket, and family members sought to console one another, without much success.
Ronald J. Aiello, another lawyer for Mr. Gargiulo, said an appeals court would see the case differently. "He's confident that further proceedings will someday exonerate him," Mr. Aiello said.
Posted by: HiDeHoNeighbor at May 18, 2006 01:05 AMHell, I'd stop with the anxiety meds if I could publically rip one from a bong, that would be sweet.
Posted by: Cupie at May 18, 2006 02:42 AMHiDeHoNeighbor, what's the deal? I posted about that years ago. Do I know you?
Cupie, wouldn't it be so great if we could do away with the shame of associating marijuana with drugs like cocaine and heroin? It pisses me off that the only reason pot users have to be ashamed is because of its status as an illegal substance. We SHOULD be able to rip one publicly, and not be afraid that co-workers, fellow citizens and cops would condemn and jail us for it. We've got to keep up the fight to legalize marijuana. As far as I'm concerned, it's as crucial as abortion rights. Thanks again for being a loyal friend and reader! It means the world to me that you are still here.
Posted by: Maria at May 18, 2006 09:16 PMMan I feel like a broke record but my father who is a retired pharmacist says all the time that Drug Companies are EVIL....
Posted by: Sandy at May 21, 2006 08:11 AMI've never been a fan of pain killers. in fact, just about every narcotic pain killer on the market makes me puke. my stomach can't handle them. and vali-um? (damn your blacklist to hell! ;-)) fuck that shit. I took it once and it gave me horrible night terrors. I woke up sweating my ass off from all of the thrashing around that I did. my mom is currently weening off of Xa-nax. she's been on it since I was a kid, so she can't just stop cold turkey for fear of stroking out. I'm glad her doctor is cutting her back. I really don't think she needs it anymore. she's hasn't had a panic attack in at least 15 years. I've been taking Adderall for about 6 months now after realizing what a piece of poo Strattera is (yeah, hi, can I have my sex drive back, please? k, thanks). I only take it when I need it (for work and big social situations). it just makes my brain function properly, helps me stay on task, and curbs some of the anxieties and anger issues that I have. I'd rather not be on it for the rest of my life (I know I can't take it if we ever decide to get preggo), but I refuse to feel guilty for taking it now b/c it helps (and I'd admit that the whole lack of appetite thing is pretty appealing). life would definitely be much easier if I could just smoke a fatty before work without the fear of random drug testing and wanting to eat every candy bar in sight, of course.
Posted by: girl at May 21, 2006 11:07 AM;)
Posted by: Cupie at May 21, 2006 08:46 PMKeep up the great work on your blog. Best wishes WaltDe
Posted by: WaltDe at August 31, 2006 01:41 PM