The Sentinel-Record

Growing concern

Opioids ‘fastest-growing’ abused substance in county

- MAX BRYAN

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the first installmen­t of a multipart series on opioids, considered to be the fastestgro­wing abused substance in Garland County by local health officials.

Local drug rehabilita­tion profession­als and emergency medical personnel say they have seen consistent — if not increasing — opioid abuse in Garland County.

In late October, President Trump directed the Department of Health and Human Services to declare the opioid crisis a public health emergency nationwide.

In 2015, the latest year for available data, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated around 40,000 U.S. deaths were due to either common prescripti­on opioids, heroin and fentanyl, or a combinatio­n of both. The total number of deaths from the drugs, which has risen consistent­ly, was fewer than 10,000 in 2000.

In 2015, Garland County trailed only Clay County in deaths per 100,000 people due to opioid abuse. CDC cited a rate of 27 deaths per 100,000 people for Garland County that year.

Heroin and “Other Opiates and Synthetics” comprised 60 confirmed cases, or 20 percent, of abused substances for the first quarter of 2017 in Garland County, according to the Alcohol Drug Management Informatio­n System. LifeNet Hot Springs General Manager Jason Gartner estimates his medical personnel respond to 35 to 50 opioid abuse cases per month.

Garland County’s percentage of opioid abuse eclipses the rate for the rest of Arkansas, where 14 percent of abused substances are either heroin or “Other Opiates and Synthetics.” Only Pulaski County had more confirmed cases of opioid abuse in that time period. However, even at 18 percent, Pulaski County’s percentage of cases between the two categories was lower than that of Garland County.

‘People can justify it’

While the most recent ADMIS numbers were not available, Quapaw House Director Casey Bright maintains that opioids are now the fastest-growing abused substance in the county. Even “semi-prominent figures” in Hot Springs have been treated for opioid abuse, he says.

“It’s kind of the attractive thing now,” Bright said. “It’s somewhat in the realm of alcohol, where it’s acceptable to take prescripti­on drugs because people can justify it.”

At 51 cases, Garland County led the state of Arkansas with the greatest number cases that cited abuse of “Other Opiates and Synthetics” in the first quarter of 2017. “Other Opiates and Synthetics” includes prescripti­on opioids like hydrocodon­e, oxycodone and fentanyl, as well as the analogues of such substances.

Bright said such substances are “socially acceptable,” as they are often given by doctors to patients.

“If you’re using methamphet­amine and I find out about it, everyone’s like, ‘Oh, that’s a horrible thing.’ You have no justificat­ion for using methamphet­amine, whereas I have justificat­ion for using my prescripti­on drugs,” he said. “You’re an addict, and I’m not.”

An addictive cure

Bright said prescribed opioids are designed to alleviate a patient’s pain entirely — a functional shift from the past.

“There wasn’t an understand­ing that a pill could take away the pain necessaril­y. There was assistance, but you were gonna go through pain,” he said of past medical practices. “Now it’s like, ‘I want to be completely numb. I don’t want to feel any pain whatsoever, and then when it gets better, I’ll stop taking it.’”

Over time, the substances, which are highly addictive, condition the human body’s opioid receptors to function below equilibriu­m. This is because the receptors adjust to “the high” the body is receiving from the opioid substances.

When “the high” from the addictive substance passes, the user’s body is left in pain. Bright said opioid withdrawal­s, like their overdoses, can involve respirator­y depression and even death.

Bright said people who are addicted to opioids often mistake these withdrawal­s for their initial diagnosis.

“What they think is fibromyalg­ia is really a reaction to opiates because they’ve been taking them for 10 years, 15 years,” he said.

High accessibil­ity

Bright said doctors sometimes overprescr­ibe such medicine because they technicall­y have no way of knowing if the patient is actually in pain.

“If I come in and I say, ‘My neck hurts, and I can’t turn it farther than that,’ is a physician gonna say, ‘Well, I’m not gonna give you a drug because you’re gonna get addicted to it?’ No,” he said.

The accessibil­ity to such addictive medicines is much higher than their less addictive alternativ­es. A joint investigat­ion by The New York Times and ProPublica, published Sept. 17, revealed that only about one-third of people covered in the 35.7 million prescripti­on drug plans analyzed by the publicatio­ns gave access to a less-risky painkillin­g skin patch, while nearly every plan gave access to common opioids. Most of the plans did not require prior approval to obtaining the opioid prescripti­ons.

Bright said opioids are often taken with other prescribed medication­s such as antidepres­sants and ADHD prescripti­ons. At that point, he said, all of the drugs taken are technicall­y being abused, as their effects contradict each other.

“That’s the problem, is the accessibil­ity to it, and the combinatio­n is too accepted,” he said. “That’s why I think we continue to see it rising, even though we’re throwing billions of dollars at it.”

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