by Jonathan Benson
August 30, 2010
(NaturalNews) Shocking new research out of the University of Buffalo has
revealed that popular prescription opioid medications are causing people to
become addicted to street drugs. Once addicted, nearly half of patients
prescribed opioid pain pills end up transitioning to street drugs like heroin
because these drugs are generally cheaper and can be easier to obtain.
Of 75 patients hospitalized at Erie County Medical Center in Buffalo, New York,
for detoxification, over 41 percent told their
doctors that they became
addicted to street drugs
after being prescribed opioid
medications -- like
methadone, oxycodone and fentanyl -- by their doctors. Ninety-two percent of all
patients in the program
indicated that these prescription opioids actually led them to street
drugs.
"This information suggests that there is a progressive nature to opioid use, and
that prescription opioids can be the gateway to illicit drug addition,"
explained Richard Blondell, M.D., professor of family medicine and senior author
of the study, in a press release.
The majority of patients in the
detoxification
program first began taking prescription opioids for pain following injuries or
surgeries. In other words, the legitimate use of prescription drugs prescribed
to patients by their doctors is a leading cause of substance
abuse.
To make matters worse, most doctors fail to even ask patients if they have ever
had a substance abuse problem prior to writing them an opioid prescription. So
many doctors are directly responsible for helping to induce drug addiction
through their neglect and carelessness in monitoring patients.
Additionally, a 2009 study found that the majority of patients who die from
opioid overdoses did so due to prescription opioids anyway, indicating that even
if patients do not transition to street drugs, their health is still at risk
from legal opioids.
Sources for this story include:
http://www.buffalo.edu/news/11652
http://www.naturalnews.com/027794_n...