Prescriptions for Drug Rehab Instead of Drugs Might Help Prescription Drug Addiction Problem
I read an article in The Facts about the extent of prescription drug addiction, specifically painkillers, in the U.S. When I worked in a drug rehab facility the biggest problems were heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine. They’re still big problems – it hasn’t gotten any better – but, according to that article, even in 2003 there were 15 million people in the U.S. taking prescription drugs, mostly painkillers, for non-medical reasons. How many of these are going to need drug rehab to get off them?
OxyContin, Percodan, Percocet, Vicoden and Darvocet, the painkillers being referred to, are opioids, similar to heroin. They are highly addictive. I’ve known a few painkiller addicts who went from one doctor to another faking injuries, aches, pains and illnesses to get prescriptions. One told a doctor she had an allergy to the painkillers she was prescribed after surgery and asked for a different, stronger, drug. She got the new prescription she asked for, but also kept the pills from the first one. She wound up taking both of them and wound up addicted. She eventually needed drug rehab.
Is it possible for doctors to write a prescription for a drug rehab program instead of drugs? If not, that might be a solution.
drug rehab, painkillers, prescription drug addiction, successful drug rehab programComment







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