The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Aye, spies: inside the Scots special ops camps

Experts report rising number of patients hooked on opiates

- By Hannah Rodger HRODGER@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Up to 200,000 Scots are addicted to powerful prescripti­on painkiller­s, The Sunday Post can reveal.

Doctors and addiction specialist­s have warned an increasing number of patients are becoming hooked on the powerful opiate painkiller­s such as morphine, tramadol and co-codamol.

One expert citing medical research suggested up to a fifth of the one million Scots prescribed the powerful painkiller­s will end up addicted.

Professor Jonathan Chick, medical director at Peebleshir­e-based Castle Craig rehab clinic, fears doctors prescribin­g the painkiller­s are unaware as patients develop addictions.

He said: “NHS doctors are sometimes put under extreme pressure to prescribe and may not have the resources to monitor how a medication is being used.

“We have seen a steady rise in the numbers of people specifical­ly requesting help to break an addiction acquired when they had been prescribed such medication­s.

“They have been prescribed the painkiller­s for a range of conditions, from sports injuries to chronic arthritic pain.

“Studies have estimated 10-20% of people prescribed opioids will begin to crave higher doses and panic if supply is short or the dose is reduced.”

“When someone not accustomed to an opioid medication takes even slightly over the prescribed dose they may not wake up, especially if alcohol or diazepam or sleeping tablet was taken at the same time. They simply stop breathing.”

Medical profession­als have warned people are not being properly assessed before being given the drugs, and once they start taking them they rarely stop.

Research suggests taking opiate painkiller­s long- term can make some patients even more sensitive to pain as well as weakening their immune system and affecting their balance, hormones and fertility.

Histor ically, people with terminal illnesses or cancer were given opiates to provide relief from excruciati­ng agony, and rarely were they given to those with chronic conditions such arthritis and back pain.

Now, it is much more common to be on the drugs for years, with researcher­s discoverin­g just 20% of people taking prescribed opiates had been able to come off them within three-and-a-half years.

Professor Blair Smith, consultant in pain medicine at Ninewells Hospital and a clinical director at Dundee University, said: “Opioids have been used for chronic pain without much evidence to show they are useful.

“The worst word for them is painkiller, as they never kill pain completely and once on them for a long time it makes you more sensitive to pain.”

He also said one of the issues with over-prescribin­g opioids is doctors have only a short time to assess patients.

He said: “GPs only have short consultati­on time to understand the whole person and their pain.

“Once people are on these drugs they very often don’t come off.”

Gareth Balmer, service manager for drug charity Addaction in Dundee, said the monitoring of patients on opiates must be strengthen­ed with more support for those who0 have developed addiction.

He said: “It is important for these medication­s to be reviewed so people aren’t on doses for long periods. We know it’s a weakness in the system.

“People think, ‘I’ll just take one more’ when the drugs stop working, and they become tolerant to them.

“Before they know it, they are given a month’s prescripti­on and use it all in two weeks. They then go to the doctor to say they’ve lost their prescripti­on, and that sort of thing might start.

“A lot of addiction services in Scotland are not set up to deal with over- the- counter and prescripti­on medication addiction. It’s an itch we don’t want to scratch as it is a big issue.

“Some services can’t cope with their bread and butter work of heroin and cocaine use, so to open up that Pandora’s box of prescripti­on medication problems… I don’t think there are resources to deal with it.”

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 ??  ?? A million Scots are on painkiller­s
A million Scots are on painkiller­s
 ??  ?? Prof. Jonathan Chick
Prof. Jonathan Chick

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