Number
of teens abusing prescription drugs triples.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- The number of Americans who admit
abusing prescription drugs nearly doubled to over 15 million
from 1992 to 2003, with abuse among teens tripling, according
to a new study released on Thursday.
The report by the National Center on Addiction and Substance
Abuse at Columbia University suggested that more Americans
were abusing controlled prescription drugs than cocaine, hallucinogens,
inhalants and heroin combined.
"Our nation is in the throes of an epidemic of controlled
prescription drug abuse and addiction," said former health
secretary Joseph Califano, chairman and founder of the Center.
"New abuse of prescription opioids among teens is up an astounding
542 percent," Califano said. "The explosion in the prescription
of addictive opioids, depressants and stimulants has, for
many children, made the medicine cabinet a greater temptation
and threat than the illegal street drug dealer, as some parents
have become unwitting and passive pushers."
The report was based on surveys of doctors and pharmacists,
personal interviews and focus groups and analysis of national
household surveys and census data.
The report said hundreds of Web sites advertised and sold
controlled drugs, often without prescription and without regard
to age so that teens and children could easily get them.
The substances most likely to be abused were opioids, or pain
relievers like OxyContin or Vicodin; central nervous system
depressants such as Valium or Xanax; stimulants including
Ritalin or Adderall and anabolic-androgenic steroids like
Anadrol or Equipoise.
"The problem can be seen in every stage of life: rich and
poor, old and young, teens partying or cramming for exams,
stressed executives, women juggling the challenges of work
and care-giving, seniors struggling with illness and loss,
the mentally ill searching for relief, movie stars, rock musicians
and athletes," the report said.
It found that between 1992 and 2002, prescriptions written
for controlled drugs increased more than 150 percent while
the number of people abusing them rose seven times faster
than the U.S. population.
In 2003, 2.3 million 12- to 17-year-olds -- almost one in
10 -- abused least one controlled prescription drug. Girls
were more likely than boys to be abusers.
Teens who abused drugs were twice as likely to use alcohol,
five times as likely to use marijuana, 12 times likelier to
use heroin and 21 times likelier to use cocaine than teens
who did not abuse such drugs.
The report also found that in 2002, controlled drugs were
implicated in almost 30 percent of drug-related emergency
room deaths while the number of prescription drug emergency
room mentions in hospital logs increased by nearly 80 percent.
Law enforcement officials around the country have been wrestling
with an epidemic of prescription drug abuse, especially of
powerful pain killers like OxyContin, popularly known as "hillbilly
heroin."
The report found a 140 percent rise in self-reported abuse
of such pain killers from 1992 to 2003, disproportionately
concentrated in the south and west of the country.