The Commercial Appeal

Lockable bottles a way to slow down opioid abuse

- Your Turn Guest columnist

On May 14, 2016, I joined a club I hope you’re never in. It’s one that’s getting bigger by the day. That was when I lost my daughter Katy to a drug overdose and joined thousands of others across Tennessee as part of the grieving parents club, made up of those who have also lost a child to the rapidly-growing opioid epidemic.

Parents inherently do anything to protect their kids from harm. From the day they’re born it’s “buckle up,” “look both ways before you cross the street,” “never talk to strangers,” “stay away from that part of town,” and on and on. But when it comes to drugs, the danger is often not on the streets or in the hands of some dealer.

Increasing­ly it’s in affluent neighborho­ods and middle-class suburbs, big cities and small towns, and most alarming, it’s as close as the family medicine cabinet.

A recent Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health survey of adults who had been prescribed an opioid in the past year found that a staggering 88 percent of those living with children ages seven to 17 stored their pills in an unlocked place, making them easily accessible to children.

The 2015 National Survey on Drug Use and Health found that young people frequently get their drugs by taking them from family and friends who have opioid prescripti­ons. More than half of the 969,000 12- to 17-year-olds who reported misusing a prescripti­on pain reliever said they got it from a friend or relative.

I made a promise to Katy that I would share our story so that other families might avoid a tragedy like ours and so many others.

All Tennessee families need to accept their vulnerabil­ity to this epidemic. Katy went to a private school, played on a travel soccer team, and exactly one year to the day before her death served as Jump Marshall at the Iroquois Steeplecha­se. No one is spared from this epidemic, regardless of age, income, race or gender.

One tactic that would help prevent thousands of Tennessean­s from initiating abuse is actually a simple concept – requiring lockable containers for prescripti­on opioids. A bill currently before the state legislatur­e, the “Pilfering Prevention Act,” would do just that by updating the current, 50-year-old child resistant bottles required today.

Will lockable bottles end the opioid epidemic? No. But we need every tool in the toolbox if we’re going to be serious about winning the war on opioids.

This measure is long overdue, won’t cost patients a penny, and will help stop addiction before it starts. For those of us who have seen the devastatin­g impact of opioids firsthand, this legislatio­n is a no brainer and is just one of many steps our state lawmakers can take that will ultimately save lives.

Betty Mason runs “Katy’s Watch,” a support group for families battling the opioid epidemic, and is a co-organizer of the STOP TN (Secure Tennessee’s Opioid Prescripti­ons) Coalition.

 ?? Betty Mason ??
Betty Mason

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States