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Saving future generations from prescription drug abuse

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One of America’s most devastating health care crises often begins in the most benign of locations — home medicine cabinets.

Our nation is becoming increasingly aware of the growing number of hospitalizations and casualties tied to prescription drug abuse. This problem is particularly acute among young adults. In 2014, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, nearly five individuals between the ages of 18 and 24 died every day, on average, from prescription drug overdoses. For every death, there were nearly 120 emergency room visits. The ease with which these young men and women get their hands on painkilling medications is particularly concerning. More than six out of 10 acquired the pills without ever having to leave home.

One source of this problem is easy to see. When we’re prescribed opioids after knee surgery or a root canal, for example, it is common for some pills to be left in the bottle when we feel better and no longer need them. But those drugs, all too often, stay in our medicine cabinet, or on top of a bedroom dresser or in the kitchen. Unused and often forgotten medications left where anyone can access them pose a serious health threat.
A Johns Hopkins School of Public Health study found that more than half of Americans who are prescribed opioids have leftover pills. A majority of those individuals don’t know or are not informed how to safely store or dispose of them. Clearly, we — and by “we,” I mean a broad coalition of governmental policymakers, community leaders, law enforcement and the healthcare industry — need to build upon existing efforts to do a better job of providing patients and families a safe, environmentally responsible way to dispose of unused medications.

At Mallinckrodt, we are dedicated to providing safe and effective medications for patients, and we are committed to working with policymakers, law enforcement officials and the industry to address the complex issues of opioid addiction and abuse.

This year alone, we have purchased and are donating more than one million drug deactivation and disposal pouches to community groups, law enforcement, schools, patients and families. These systems deactivate prescription drugs and make the chemical compounds in the pills safe for landfills. The pouches also are biodegradable. We’re working with community leaders and organizations to distribute these pouches where they can have the most benefit.

We are also committed to raising public awareness of the critical role of responsible drug disposal in the fight against prescription drug abuse.

While effective, this is just one step. Additional actions need to be taken. The pharmaceutical industry needs to continue its work on tamper-resistant and abuse-deterrent drug delivery technologies, while lawmakers and regulators craft the standards that will enable their adoption. We must improve the integration of state and federal prescription drug monitoring programs and share best practices for detecting suspicious drug orders at the manufacturing and supply chain stages.

We should enhance drug take-back and addiction rehabilitation programs, while doing a better job overall of educating patients, healthcare providers and the public about the dangers of prescription drug abuse. And, we should consider the use of alternatives to opioids when medically appropriate. Mallinckrodt is committed to these types of efforts and encourages others to take action as well.

Attacking the problem of prescription drug abuse requires a sustained, multi-faceted effort. By taking both common sense and innovative steps to make opioids less accessible for non-medical uses, we can reduce the number of ER cases and tragic, unnecessary deaths. We must eliminate the possibility that prescription drug abuse, misuse or diversion begins in the home medicine cabinet.

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Combined effort under way to battle drug addiction

AS HALLOWEEN approaches, we prepare ourselves to see people in scary masks. But we all understand that those costumed faces aren’t real.

What is real is a very scary face that’s too often masked from the public. It destroys families and sometimes results in death.

We’re talking about drug addiction – a problem that affects people from all walks of life today.

Mercer County has seen several deaths due to drug overdoses – often related to heroin – in the past year alone. And across the state there are reportedly 10 deaths due to the drug crisis every day.

That’s right: every day.

But there is hope thanks to a number of efforts to fight the problem. For example, The Herald recently reported:

• Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf is pushing the General Assembly to act on anti-drug bills. One includes setting up a prescription drug database that notes when a patient is prescribed opioids. Too often these drugs can lead to addiction and some people even move on to illegal drugs to get their “fix.” This is one time we agree that “Big Brother” should be watching.

• Mercer County is setting up a mobile medical office that offers a periodic shot of Vivitrol, which blocks the receptors in the body that give heroin users a high. Deaths from heroin use have risen sharply in the past year because the drug is mixed with other toxic chemicals. The Vivitrol treatments, when combined with therapy, can hopefully provide a cure to the addiction.

• Local emergency crews are being equipped with the drug Narcan which can save a person’s life when he or she is dying from a opioid overdose.

• Seminars developed by the Mercer County Behavior Health Commission and others provided information on the drug problem and included speakers such as counselors, members of law enforcement, religious leaders and medical personnel.

• Plans are in the works to open a detox center in Farrell. Currently the closest facilities for in-patient treatment are some 50 miles away or more. Mercer County Coroner John A. Libonati, who reported 18 local overdose deaths since the start of the year, said, “It’s desperately needed.”

Just recently in Sharon, emergency personnel administered the drug Narcan to a man who had wrecked his car and was unresponsive. It saved his life. But the severity of the crisis was made extremely clear because the man was driving with his 3-year-old child strapped in the backseat.

Luckily the child suffered only minor injuries. But it demonstrates that a person’s drug addiction sadly can have adverse effects on his family and friends.

We carry stories on men and women who are arrested for burglaries or robberies, people who claim they committed crimes to satisfy the need for drugs. Victims are often mentally scarred. But an even bigger fear is that a person high on drugs might injure or kill a victim during a crime.

It is gratifying to see the coordinated effort on state, county and local levels to battle the growing crisis of drug use.

Maybe the combined assault on the problem will bring positive results – and fewer needless deaths of local men and women.
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