One pill to kill say methadone bereaved
Candor Trust 29/11/06
One pill to kill say methadone bereaved
The FDA yesterday warned health care
professionals about the dangers of
methadone including
cardio-toxicity, saying Prescribers' should read and
carefully follow prescribing information. Methadone is a
synthetic opiate
commonly given to opiate addicts so
their lives will be less chaotic.
NZs Candor (Campaign
Against Drugs on Roads) group believes FDA are responding to
Melissa Zuppardi's ferocious 'one pill to kill' campaign.
'We support her campaign, we know bad treatment has severe
implications for road safety.'
Zuppardi of Connecticut
has begun a petition asking for improved treatment
standards and more effort to stop dangerous on-selling.
On June 24th 2006, Zuppardis fiance pro sportsman Ron,
was prescribed methadone in a detox facility for percocet
addiction after knee surgery. He was
administered
excessive amounts of methadone and valium. He was dead
several
hours before staff checked on him. He was 32
years old. He has 2 children.
676 people – often
similarly affected to Melissa have signed the petition in
it's short life to date. Methadone supporters have
debated it's merits with
Melissa. Who notes the irony of
methadones 'strongest supporters besides
pharmaceutical
companies' being the patients who are 'exploited and
victimised', by those benefiting the most.
The FDA's
announcement says Prescribers, Patients and Caregivers
should all be
alert to 3 key points.
Taking more
methadone than prescribed can cause death. Taking other
medicines or dietary supplements atop methadone can cause
death. Overdose symptoms include confusion, tiredness and
breathing difficulties, if present get medical
attention
fast.
In the wake of recent high mortality the FDA notes
'prescribing methadone is
complex.' A medication guide
for patients is planned. Box warnings currently
don't
caution against interactions with other drugs – a common
overdose cause.
In 2003 methadone contributed to 2,992
deaths in the States. Though cognisant
of an epidemic,
the FDA then refused to even require box warnings regarding
the
drugs cardio-toxicity despite studies show
potentially fatal arrhythmias are
common.
The
rumblings of discontent over the U.S. epidemic were not
quelled any by a
cross departmental report undertaken.
It put the deaths down to increased use
pain
prescriptions - rather than addiction treatment, and was
heavily influenced
by treatment expert Stewart Leavitt.
A methadone manufacturer employee.
Relatives of victims
couldn't ignore the fact methadone didn't discriminate.
Just as in New Zealand, deaths hit methadone program
patients and those they on
sell methadone to, more often
than Leavitts report intimated. Anecdotally NZ has
worse
problems than the United States, says Candor Trusts Rachael
Ford.
Coroner Kershaw has commented there is a perception
methadone was a
'therapeutic' drug, though it's 'just as
dangerous as the drugs it replaced'.
He was concerned
users are unaware the drug kills as many people as morphine
and heroin. 'It's because they get huge takeaways & the
program's too soft' says
Ford.
From July 1995 to June
1998 there were 44 methadone related deaths in New
Zealand – four of them in Wairarapa or about 10% of
Wairarapa patients. In the
same period 40 New Zealanders
died of heroin or morphine overdoses. This does
not take
in to account deaths caused by methadone impaired drivers,
which Candor estimate to be 15-20% of the toll.
Long term
patients of a North Island clinic who admit to being
transient and
moving randomly for years say it's the
same all over. A lot of methadone is sold
outside
Pharmacies, often to P (methamphetamine) addicts wanting to
'chill'.
Sellers then continue on to some location where
they can use the spoils to buy
P.
'They all drive –
they have to to get their drugs' said an informant. 'I asked
the meth Drs to stop the diversion as it worries me
sick. Someones gonna die or
something, don't know how
many times I seen mates turn blue, but the Doc just
offered me antidepressants'.
In the face of some
alarming statistics the Ministry of Health hasn't made
changes or set out to record patient mortality or road
accidents, say Candor.
Green MP Sue Kedgley has
recently highlighted prolonged delays with setting up some
system to report adverse events in NZ's Health system.
Ends