Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Prescription drug abuse set to exceed use of illicit narcotics globally




Prescription drug abuse set to exceed use of illicit narcotics globally
Already outstripped traditional illegal drugs in parts of Europe, Africa
and South Asia: report Last Updated: Wednesday, February 28, 2007 | 8:13
PM ET The Associated Press

Abuse of prescription drugs is about to exceed the use of illicit street
narcotics worldwide - and the shift has spawned a lethal new trade in
counterfeit painkillers, sedatives and other medicines potent enough to
kill, a global watchdog warned Wednesday.

Already, prescription drug abuse has outstripped traditional illegal
drugs such as heroin, cocaine and Ecstasy in parts of Europe, Africa and
South Asia, the UN-affiliated International Narcotics Control Board said
in its annual report for 2006.

In the United States alone, the abuse of painkillers, stimulants,
tranquilizers and other prescription medications has gone beyond
"practically all illicit drugs with the exception of cannabis," with
users increasingly turning to them first, the Vienna-based group said.

And unregulated markets in many countries make it easy for traffickers
to peddle a wide variety of counterfeit drugs through courier services,
ordinary mail and the internet.

"Gains over the past years in international drug control may be
seriously undermined by this ominous development if it remains
unchecked," INCB president Philip Emafo said.

Discount medications that seem to be authentic often turn out to be
cheap but powerful knockoffs concocted from recipes posted on the web,
Emafo added.

"Instead of healing, they can take lives," he said, characterizing the
danger as "real and sizable."

Up to 50 per cent of all drugs taken in developing countries are
believed to be counterfeit, the board said, citing estimates from the
World Health Organization.

Buprenorphine, an analgesic, is now the main injection drug in most of
India, and it is also trafficked and abused in tablet form in France,
where the INCB estimates 20 to 25 per cent of the drug sold commercially
as Subutex is being diverted to the black market.
Canadians ditching heroin for prescription narcotics

A study published in November 2006 in the Canadian Medical Association
Journal found that heroin was no longer the opiate of choice among many
substance abusers in Canada - prescription narcotics such as morphine
and OxyContin were taking its place.

Researchers studied street users in seven cities across the country in
2005, and found that heroin remained the No. 1 illicit opiate only in
Vancouver and Montreal. In the five other cities - Edmonton, Toronto,
Quebec City, Fredericton and Saint John - more often than not, getting
high meant taking prescription opioids like Percodan.

When the study was released, lead author Benedikt Fischer, an addiction
researcher at the University of Victoria, said the switch to highly
addictive prescription narcotics among street users likely represents
just the tip of the iceberg

He said he suspected the numbers would be much higher if the general
population was factored in.

The INCB said the number of Americans abusing prescription drugs nearly
doubled from 7.8 million in 1992 to 15.1 million in 2003. Among their
prescription drugs of choice: the painkillers oxycodone, sold under the
trade name OxyContin, and hydrocodone, sold as Vicodin and used by 7.4
per cent of college students in 2005.

Although the number of U.S. high school and college students abusing
illicit drugs declined in 2006 for a fourth consecutive year, "the high
and increasing level of abuse of prescription drugs by both adolescents
and adults is a serious cause for concern," it said.

Counterfeiters are exploiting intense demand for prescription drugs that
can give a "high" comparable to cocaine, heroin or methamphetamine, the
watchdog group said.
(c) The Canadian Press, 2007


1 comment:

kayakotto said...

Thanks for the enlightening post. Prescription drug abuse and addiction is reaching epidemic proportions in this country, if not the world. One has to wonder what part is played in this by the pharmaceuticals companies hawking their wares all over the media, much like carnival barkers. Somewhere in all this responsibility needs to extent further than the making of the mighty "buck".