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Fighting Drug Abuse at Its Source

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The 80’s war on drugs was the nation’s attempt to battle the ongoing ravages of a growing drug culture on the nation’s people, especially its youth. Although successful, it seems as if the ground gained by those efforts are beginning to fade as more and more states see an increase in drug use. However, this time it’s not cocaine that’s ravaging the nation; it’s heroin and prescription drugs. While a new war on drugs is gaining momentum with state legislatures, lawmakers must address the root cause of the drug use and not just the symptoms.
 

How the War on Drugs Lost Ground

Surprisingly, drug use began to escalate in the past decade not on the streets, where anti-drug efforts are often concentrated, but in regulated physician offices. As doctors began prescribing more opiate-based pain relievers for patients, some of these patients became addicted. They continued taking the pills long after their original ailment was healed because these pain relievers blocked the feelings of stress and anxiety. After these patients were cut off by their physicians or began to run out of money to pay for them, they turned to the streets for their fix. Here they could buy heroin, which achieved similar effects but at a lower cost. In many instances heroin was easier to purchase than prescription drugs, causing their usage to increase.
Compounding the problem is that drug manufacturers saw their profits rise. In response, they began manufacturing even more prescription painkillers, some up to 10 times more powerful than their first-generation predecessors.
 

The Government Response

State and federal governments have found themselves in a panic due to the overdose epidemic. They closed their eyes for a decade while the painkiller addiction epidemic was created in doctors’ offices. Then, the abuse reached the streets, heroin addictions increased and painkiller overdoses got out of hand. Once everyone started to talk about it, they began pouring money in to the same treatment methods and replacement drugs that didn’t work previously.
In response to a growing heroin addiction problem, the state of New Jersey is considering bills aimed at fighting heroin and prescription-drug abuse. Sen. Joseph Vitale, a supporter of the bills says, “Many users across the state first become addicted to prescription medication and then moved on the cheaper, stronger and more deadly option of heroin.” He says the bills are aimed at both educating the public on the dangers of heroin and prescription drugs as well as treating those already addicted. The bills would require colleges and universities to establish separate housing for addicted students, institute addiction treatment services for prisons and require physicians to discuss addiction risks of prescription drugs with patients.
Meanwhile officials in Massachusetts are facing their own battle against heroin and prescription pain addiction, specifically Oxcycontin, Oxycodone and Percocet. State records indicate that between 2003 and 2007, 3,200 people died from overdoses. There, they are considering bills that would prevent pills from being crushed, cut or melted, which drug abusers use to get a more euphoric high.
 

Treating the Cause, Not the Symptoms

While implementing recovery treatment programs for those who are addicted is certainly a necessity, many argue that it doesn’t go far enough in stopping this plague at its source. The current drug war must start by educating the public to bring awareness about the dangers of these drugs. In addition, professionals must be allowed to treat patients by assessing their emotional and social needs in addition to their physical ones. It is these former needs that often lead to long-term addiction. Policy makers cannot throw everyone into cookie cutter drug treatment programs they will fail for most.
 

Source

http://www.enterprisenews.com/article/20140305/NEWS/140308470/?Start=2
http://www.northjersey.com/news/n-j-senate-oks-bills-aimed-at-fighting-fighting-heroin-prescription-drug-abuse-1.1166474

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