The Denver Post

Users in recovery: “It never really leaves you” Threat meets threat

- By Lindsey Tanner

TENN.» Businessma­n NASHVILLE, Kyle Graves shot himself in the ankle so emergency room doctors would feed his opioid habit.

Ex-trucker Jeff McCoy threatened to blow his brains out if his mother didn’t hand over his fentanyl patches.

Bianca Knight resorted to street pills when her opioids ran out, watching her law career dreams crumble.

These are three Americans who started using powerful painkiller­s legitimate­ly but, as millions of others have, got caught in the country’s worst drug epidemic.

Now they’re fighting the same recovery battle, on anti-addiction medicine similar to pills that nearly did them in. Their doctor, Dan Lonergan, a Vanderbilt University pain and addiction physician, sometimes recommends the same drugs to pain patients that brought his addiction patients to the brink.

“Doctors have contribute­d to this problem. In the past three decades we have gotten a lot of patients on medication­s that can be very dangerous,” he said. “The pharmaceut­ical industry has contribute­d significan­tly to this problem. This is a problem that we all need to own.”

This is a snapshot from America’s addiction crisis. More than 2 million people are hooked on opioids. Overdoses kill, on average, 120 Americans every day. Even for survivors, success can be precarious.

Desperate measure

At 53 and on disability, Kyle Graves still feels stabbing pains that a daily handful of pills used to ease.

His troubles began more than a decade ago when he sought relief for arthritis. He was prescribed oxycodone, opioid pills that can help short-term pain but can become addictive when used long-term.

When he lost his finance manager job, they helped with that pain, too. When his sixth child, a baby boy, died from spinal meningitis, Graves sunk deep into addiction.

He’d use up a month’s supply in days, followed by terrible withdrawal­s — vomiting, shaking uncontroll­ably, intense pain.

After a doctor refused more refills, Graves grabbed a pistol from his nightstand, pulled the trigger, and called an ambulance.

At the hospital, two shots of morphine for the ankle wound “did the trick.”

Graves thinks only his wife suspected the ruse; she left with the kids.

“It just devastated and ruined my life,” he said.

Graves went to rehab, treated with hard work and prayer. It worked for a time, but after relapsing Graves sought help three years ago from Lonergan, who prescribed recovery medicine containing buprenorph­ine, an opioid that reduces cravings and withdrawal symptoms.

Jeff McCoy has been a drummer, a Harley rider and long-haul trucker. These days he prefers baking cookies and doting on his wife, Joanne. Recovery from opioid painkiller­s prompted the turnaround.

It started nearly 17 years ago, after surgery for a back injury — maybe from too much time on the road, he’s not really sure, but it forced him to quit trucking. His doctor prescribed Vicodin — painkiller­s that contain the opioid hydrocodon­e. Soon he was hooked.

When those stopped working, he was prescribed powerful fentanyl skin patches that deliver medicine gradually. McCoy found that chewing them worked faster.

McCoy needed ever more to avoid withdrawal­s.

His wife would lock the patches in a safe. But when he found the key, his mother stored them at her house nearby.

“Got to the point where I got on the phone with mom, ‘You better bring me that patch right now else I’m splatterin­g my brains all over this living room.’ ”

When his wife threatened to leave, he checked in to a detox center, in 2009, enduring two hellish weeks of withdrawal. Now he calls his wife his addiction and figures he’ll be on anti-craving medicine for life.

Questions

After law school graduation, Bianca Knight had a nagging question: “How do

Opioid crisis cost $504 billion in 2015, higher than once thought.

WASHINGTON» President Donald Trump said Monday that the opioid epidemic is “ravaging so many American families and communitie­s.” It also appears to be more expensive than previously thought, according to a government analysis released Monday.

The White House Council of Economic Advisers pegs the true cost of the crisis in 2015 at $504 billion.

The figure is more than six times the most recent estimate. The council said a 2016 private study estimated that prescripti­on opioid overdose, misuse and dependence in the U.S. cost $78.5 billion in 2013. Most of that was attributed to health care and criminal justice spending, along with lost productivi­ty.

The council said that its estimate is significan­tly larger because the epidemic has worsened, with overdose deaths doubling in the past decade, and that some previous studies didn’t reflect the number of fatalities blamed on opioids, a powerful but addictive category of painkiller­s. — The Associated Press I know if I have a problem?”

After injuring her back carrying law books, Knight had spent the past two years medicated, on hydrocodon­e pills from a different doctor.

Soon she was taking far more than the prescribed amount.

“Toward the end, I resorted to buying off the street,” Knight said. That’s when she sought out Lonergan.

Knight started buprenorph­ine treatment. Church and support group meetings also help, she says. Her baby girl, born this past summer, is extra incentive for her to stay clean.

 ?? David Goldman, AP ?? Dr. Dan Lonergan treats patient Jeff McCoy at his practice in Franklin, Tenn.
David Goldman, AP Dr. Dan Lonergan treats patient Jeff McCoy at his practice in Franklin, Tenn.

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