4 Troubled Teens Blog

Unintentional Overdose Deaths Linked to Prescription Pain Killers

Over the past few years, West Virginia has experienced one of the highest increases in the rate of drug overdose deaths of any state. Between 1999 and 2004, West Virginia's rate of unintentional poisoning more than quintupled, increasing by an astounding 550 percent. A new study of these deaths has found that most of these fatalities were the result of non-medical/recreational use of prescription drugs. The most commonly identified type of drug in these cases was prescription pain killers.

Beginning in 1997, experts in pain management began encouraging wider use of opioid pain medications for the management of chronic pain problems. The experts also recommended that patients who were prescribed opioid pain medications be carefully evaluated and counseled. In the past 10 years, however, per capita sales of pain relievers in the United States have increased drastically. Notably, emergency room visits and deaths because of pain killer overdoses have also significantly increased.

The West Virginia study was conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta. (Source: sciencedaily.com)

Labels: prescription_drug_abuse, overdose, pain-killers

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One Family's Ordeal

Amy Smith felt relief and hope when her son Ryan was diagnosed as bipolar. She was elated to have found out what was wrong and begin finding ways to help him. Then, just three days later, her relief turned to despair when Ryan died of a drug overdose.
"Smith believes that chemical addictions develop more from prescription and over-the-counter drugs than the illegal stuff the pusher is dispensing on the street corner."
Ryan died, not from cocaine or heroin, but from a lethal mix of a narcotic painkiller and prescription pills used for treating panic disorder. Smith hopes that her son's tragic story will once again bring into the spotlight the often-talked-about, but also often-ignored dangers of prescription drug abuse. Source: Gainesville Times

Not sure what's going on with your teenager? The Aspen Institute for Behavioral Assessment can help. The Institute provides comprehensive tests to arrive at an accurate diagnosis and treatment program.

Labels: prescription_drug_abuse, bi-polar, overdose

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