I remarked a few months ago (when I first started hearing those cautioning commercials on TV about heroin and overdoses in the Ohio/Pennsylvania area) ... WHAT?
I'm 67, done most every drug up until 1981 (when I got saved) and not only didn't like DOOJIE, but knew no one except abject losers that did.
All these years and Pennsylvanians, dressed in nice clothes driving SUV's OD on smack
Sorry .... I don't but it.
“All these years and Pennsylvanians, dressed in nice clothes driving SUV’s OD on smack”
I have no personal experience. A friend in Tallahassee just sat on the jury of a black man accused of dealing huge amounts of coke and crack. He didn’t even have a driver’s license. His white customers were nicely dressed, middle aged whites employed in the many levels of government and at the two local universities. They’d drive him to a nearby rural town in their Lexus or SUV to pick up the drugs. This went on for four years. (Total of four blacks involved and dozens of white customers. The other three copped a plea.)
Our 41 year old grandson is trying to kick heroin. Since a teenager he’s taken anything he could get his hands on. He’s on methadone now and has been tapering off, I think his dosage is half what it was six months ago.
For a while his mom was driving him to the clinic to get his daily fix. She couldn’t believe the number of people from all levels that show up at 6:30 in the morning to get their fix. This is in Temecula, CA. Very nice area.
I dont know where in PA you live, but here in Central PA; York, Lancaster and Lebanon counties, not to mention Dauphin Co. and of course Harrisburg or as I like to call it - Detroit on the Susquehanna, heroin and OxyContin abuse along with Meth to some extent, is a very real problem around here and Im not just talking about in the cities of York, Lancaster and Lebanon where the problem is more evident among the Blacks and Hispanics although not solely restricted to those groups, but also in the rural areas and the small (and mostly white) towns.
My former boss who retired last year and has two nieces who graduated from HS in the Manheim area of northern Lancaster Co. within the last couple of years, told me that her nieces told her that heroin and OxyContin and other opiates were very easy and not all that expensive to get if one wanted to, even to buy right in the HSs everyone knew who was selling and who was buying. And these were not only the down and out bums in an inner city slum types, but a lot of middle and upper middle class white kids. And it isnt just the kids as in the High school kids. A lot of adults are using these drugs too.
Thats because, like prescription pain medications, heroin is an opioid... When a physician stops prescribing opioids or those drugs become too expensive, a patient may switch to heroin, which is relatively cheap and easy to obtain.
Here is my concern and I will point out that there are legitimate uses for Rx opiod pain killers which are a God send for those people who are in severe pain, post op, etc. or have chronic very painful conditions. But now many doctors just will not proscribe them anymore even when indicated. Ive even read stories about late stage terminal cancer patients not being able to get Rx pain killers anymore out of the concerns over their addictive properties. Like the last thing a terminal cancer patient in severe pain or society at large has to worry about is them becoming addicted to an opiod pain killer if they only have weeks or months to live.
And when they are legitimately proscribed, both the doctor and the patient are made to feel like criminals or reported to, put under suspicion, are now tracked by the DEA.
Yes, without question there are some people who are at first legitimately proscribed pain killers who end up addicted to them (Rush Limbaugh is one such an example that first comes to mind) and there are some doctors who proscribe these very dangerous drugs like candy, but IMO, the vast majority do not, but all now suffer for the bad actions of the few. And now those people who need them cant get pain relievers and are told to take an OTC pain reliever like Tylenol or Motrin that while not addictive have their own set of problems and potential complications and dont work nearly as well.
Back in the mid 90s I had a severe back injury and was proscribed Percocet and a muscle relaxer, both Rxs were not refillable and I only took them for a few days to get me over the worst of the pain and the severe muscle spasms and flushed the pills I did not take once I no longer was in pain. But just last month when I suffered another similar back injury, all I got was a referral for physical therapy (and that is not a bad thing) but nothing for the debilitating pain, I was just told to take an OTC. When I asked the Dr. about an Rx for muscle relaxers, she at first gave me the stink eye and then gave in after I told her I had been proscribed them by my former Dr. and assured her that that not only did I not take them regularly but that my last Rx for them, that the bottle was still half full and expired when I had flushed them, but not before giving me a long lecture about only taking them before bed, not driving, operating machinery, etc.
The last time I got a pain killer Rx of an opiod was when I had a severely abscessed molar. I had to have the molar removed and the dentist wrote me an Rx for an antibiotic and for hydrocodone - only for 10 pills but thank God he did as the otherwise the severe pain would have driven me to madness. But having taken both Percocet and hydrocodone for very short periods of time, I can understand why they are or can be addictive to some. I deducted while taking those drugs, is that they really do dull the pain but they dont really make the pain go completely away, but they do make you more oblivious to it and just about everything else you still feel some pain but you dont care about it as much about it nor anything else.
On a related side note, my older brother who lives near several big retirement communities near the Jersey Shore told me that one day he went to a local liquor store to buy a bottle of wine for him and his wife for their wedding anniversary dinner. Hed been to this liquor store a few times before but he noticed that the liquor store was very crowded on that day, filled with a lot of very elderly folks, a lot of them using canes and walkers, some on oxygen and they were buying several bottles of cheap brandy or whiskey at a time and they didnt look like your typical boozers. i.e. alcoholic types, very nicely dressed, diving nice cars, etc.
Curious, my brother asked the liquor store owner why on that day there were so many old folks and the owner said, Look at the calendar its the first week of the month when they get their SS payments so they are stocking up. Stocking up? my brother asked. Yes, they are stocking up on their pain relievers the liquor store owner told him, A lot of these folks have severe arthritis or other very painful conditions but their doctors will no longer proscribe them any pain relievers so they come here to get some liquor to help them with the pain instead.