Texarkana Gazette

POLL: MOST AMERICANS SEE PERSONAL TIE TO RISING PRESCRIPTI­ON PAINKILLER ABUSE

- —KAISER HEALTH NEWS

The growing abuse of prescripti­on painkiller­s now touches home for a majority of Americans, according to a poll released Tuesday. More than 56 percent of the public say they have a personal connection to the issue, reports the latest monthly tracking poll of the Kaiser Family Foundation. That share includes those who say they know someone who died from a painkiller overdose, have been addicted themselves or know someone who has and those who know someone who took painkiller­s not prescribed to them, the poll’s results show. (KHN is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Foundation.) Details from the poll:

16 percent say they know someone who has died and 9 percent say that person was a close friend or family member.

27 percent say either they have been addicted to painkiller­s or they have known a family member or close friend who was.

63 percent of whites say they have a personal connection to the abuse of prescripti­on painkiller­s compared with 44 percent of blacks and 37 percent of Hispanics.

Half of those surveyed rank prescripti­on painkiller and heroin abuse as a top priority for their governor and legislatur­e, behind improving public education and making health care more accessible and affordable, which drew 76 percent and 68 percent shares, respective­ly.

Efforts to reduce painkiller abuse would be at least somewhat effective, many Americans say. Providing treatment for addicts is cited by 85 percent, monitoring doctors’ prescribin­g habits by 82 percent and encouragin­g people to dispose of leftover medication by 69 percent.

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