Weekend Herald

Star’s dad brings drug misuse message to NZ

Kim Ledger determined for something positive to come from son’s death

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The father of Oscar- winning actor Heath Ledger — who died from an accidental medication overdose in 2008 — is coming to New Zealand to campaign against the misuse of prescripti­on drugs.

Ledger, who starred in The Dark Knight and Brokeback Mountain, was found dead at age 28 in his New York apartment. The city’s medical examiner ruled he died of an accidental overdose involving six medicines: oxycodone and another opioid painkiller, an antihistam­ine sedative, and three benzodiaze­pines used for anxiety and/ or insomnia.

“I came to the understand­ing,” said the actor’s father, Kim Ledger, “that what had happened to our child was part of a massive picture, and I felt, and continue to feel strongly, that something absolutely positive needs to come out of this.”

Kim Kedger is the patron of Australian group Scriptwise, formed to help prevent prescripti­on medicine misuse by raising awareness of the issue. He will speak at the Cutting Edge Addictions Conference in Rotorua next month.

Kim Ledger told the Daily Mail Australia that his son’s death was his own fault. Heath’s sister Kate had begged him not to mix sleeping pills with opioids in the hours before he died.

“He said, ‘ Katie, Katie, I’m fine. I know what I’m doing.’ He would have had no idea.

“It was totally his fault. It was no one else’s — he reached for them. He put them in his system.”

But Ledger also noted the demands of being a top actor would have led his son to take prescripti­on drugs to keep going. And because of his celebrity status, doctors he consulted while travelling would have been inclined to give him what he wanted, instead of what he needed.

His message to the conference will be: “What can start off as a simple prescripti­on can result in medication misuse and people tend to get on to a treadmill that they struggle to get off.”

“I want to share my experience to arm other individual­s and families with valuable informatio­n and knowledge in preventing any misuse of these medication­s.” Scriptwise says at least three Australian­s die every day from an overdose and 83 per cent of cases involve prescripti­on medication­s. Similar data is not available for New Zealand. Wellington addictions specialist Dr Jeremy McMinn warned in 2014 that this country’s use of oxycodone, a strong opioid similar to morphine, was “a disaster in the making”. He noted yesterday that oxycodone use was declining but use of other opioids was rising.

“We still have increasing prescribin­g of morphine and codeine, both of which have a resale value and abuse potential and potential to give Heath Ledger- type overdoses.”

Oxycodone was initially thought to be preferable to morphine, but is now known to be even more addictive, according to the Best Practice Journal. New Zealand’s oxycodone consumptio­n, although much lower than that of Australia, Britain and the US, rose sharply in the 2000s but has declined since 2011.

Data published yesterday shows it was dispensed to 5.4 of every 1000 people last year, down from 7.3 in 2011 — compared with a big increase to 11 per 1000 for morphine, from 7.5.

Other stars to succumb to prescripti­on medicines include Prince, who died aged 57 in April from an accidental overdose of the opioid fentanyl.

And in 2009 Michael Jackson died of acute toxicity from propofol, an anaestheti­c administer­ed to him by Dr Conrad Murray, who was found guilty of Jackson’s involuntar­y manslaught­er. Murray had also administer­ed two antianxiet­y/ insomnia medicines, lorazepam and midazolam to Jackson. Picture of father / AP The site of a historic battle in the New Zealand Wars has been returned to iwi ownership. Rangiriri Pa and Te Wheoro Redoubt were restored to Waikato- Tainui in Ngaruawahi­a yesterday as part of the Maori King’s 10th anniversar­y celebratio­ns. A woman broke her leg at Whakapapa skifield when a seat came off a T- bar lift she was riding. She fell and slid several metres across the snow. A spokeswoma­n for ski area operator Ruapehu Alpine Lifts said the connection between the T- bar seat and the grip on the overhead cable had disengaged as a result of a worn thread. All three T- bars at the skifield on Mt Ruapehu had been immediatel­y checked. The Government is pumping $ 9 million into a campaign to find more science, technology and maths teachers. Part of the money will be spent to encourage New Zealandtra­ined teachers to return from overseas and 100 scholarshi­ps will be offered for science, technology and maths subjects to lift the number of graduates in these areas. Rescue parties are searching for an elderly tramper missing in the Tararua Forest Park. The fit, experience­d 67- year- old was expected to return to his car from a three- day tramp on Thursday but never arrived. Weather in the park is cold but dry. An Auckland pharmacist who falsified a prescripti­on and sold prescripti­on drugs to a known addict has been sentenced to 10 months’ home detention and 200 hours’ community service. He is Terrence Wong, 32.

 ?? Herald graphic ?? Martin Johnston Oscar winner Heath Ledger ( right) and as The Joker in The Dark Knight . Below, his father, Kim Ledger. Farmer admits cruelty Brash’s new companion Iwi gets battle site Woman injured on T- bar $ 9 million teacher drive
Herald graphic Martin Johnston Oscar winner Heath Ledger ( right) and as The Joker in The Dark Knight . Below, his father, Kim Ledger. Farmer admits cruelty Brash’s new companion Iwi gets battle site Woman injured on T- bar $ 9 million teacher drive

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