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Prescription Drug Abuse/misuse in Oklahoma

Prescription Drug Abuse/misuse in Oklahoma. Claire Nguyen, MS Injury Epidemiologist ClaireN@health.ok.gov. Avy Redus, MS Project Coordinator AvyD@health.ok.gov. Oklahoma State Department of Health Injury Prevention Service 405-271-3430 http://poison.health.ok.gov. Background. Poisoning

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Prescription Drug Abuse/misuse in Oklahoma

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  1. Prescription Drug Abuse/misuse in Oklahoma Claire Nguyen, MS Injury Epidemiologist ClaireN@health.ok.gov Avy Redus, MS Project Coordinator AvyD@health.ok.gov Oklahoma State Department of Health Injury Prevention Service 405-271-3430 http://poison.health.ok.gov

  2. Background • Poisoning • Ingestion, inhalation, absorption, or contact with a substance resulting in a toxic effect or bodily harm. • Unintentional • Individual did not intend harm to themselves or someone else • May intentionally take a drug, but did not intend to harm themselves

  3. methods • Office of the Chief Medical Examiner • Centralized system • IPS receives ME reports for all non-natural deaths • Narrative • Autopsy • Toxicology • Manner of death

  4. Scope of the problem

  5. Unintentional drug overdose death rates in the U.S. have more than tripled since 1990. *Deaths are those for which poisoning by drugs (illicit, prescription, and over-the-counter) was the underlying cause. Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2013

  6. Magnitude of the Problem, U.S. • 15,000 deaths annually • In 2010, 1 in 20 used pain killers for nonmedical purposes • Enough prescription painkillers were prescribed in 2010 to medicate every American adult around-the-clock for a month. Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2012

  7. Unintentional Poisoning Death Rates, Oklahoma and the United States, 1999-2010 Source: WISQARS, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  8. Unintentional Poisoning and Motor Vehicle Crash Death Rates, Oklahoma, 1999-2010 Source: WISQARS, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  9. Mortality Rates by Age Group* and Gender, Unintentional Poisoning, Oklahoma, 2007-2012 *Decedents under age 15 and over age 74 were excluded due to small number of cases (<1% of all UP deaths) Source: OSDH, Injury Prevention Service, Unintentional Poisonings Database (Abstracted from Medical Examiner reports)

  10. Deaths Involving Prescription Drugs, Illicit Drugs, or Alcohol by Year of Death, Unintentional Poisoning, Oklahoma, 2007-2012 Source: OSDH, Injury Prevention Service, Unintentional Poisonings Database (Abstracted from Medical Examiner reports)

  11. Substances Involved in Unintentional Poisoning Deaths, Oklahoma, 2007-2012 Source: OSDH, Injury Prevention Service, Unintentional Poisonings Database (Abstracted from Medical Examiner reports)

  12. Medications Most common medications (number of deaths); Oxycodone (791) Hydrocodone (787) Alprazolam (733) Methadone (628) Morphine (463)

  13. Unintentional Poisoning Death Rates by County of Residence1, Oklahoma, 2007-2012 Cimarron Texas Nowata Ottawa Beaver Kay Woods Alfalfa Harper Grant Craig Washington Osage Rogers Woodward Noble Garfield Mayes Delaware Pawnee Major Ellis Tulsa Payne Dewey Wagoner Creek Rates per 100,000 population Cherokee Adair Logan Kingfisher Blaine Lincoln Roger Mills Muskogee Custer Okmulgee Canadian Sequoyah Oklahoma Top 5 counties 21.1 – 34.2 17.9 – 21.0 12.6 – 17.8 7.6 – 12.5 <5 deaths Okfuskee McIntosh Beckham Washita Potta- watomie Cleveland Seminole Haskell Caddo Hughes Grady Kiowa Greer McClain Latimer Pittsburg Le Flore Pontotoc Garvin Comanche Harmon Jackson Coal Murray Stephens Pushmataha Tillman State rate2: 17.5 Cotton Atoka Johnston Carter Jefferson McCurtain Choctaw Marshall Bryan Love 1County of residence was unknown for 31 persons. Source: OSDH, Injury Prevention Service, Unintentional Poisonings Database (Abstracted from Medical Examiner reports)

  14. Consequences Associated with Prescription Drug Abuse/Misuse

  15. Legal Consequences

  16. Health Consequences

  17. Social Consequences

  18. Financial Consequences

  19. Why has prescription drug abuse/misuse become so prevalent?

  20. What can you do?

  21. Safe Use • Never take prescription medication that is not prescribed to you • Never take your prescription medication more often or in higher doses than prescribed • Never drink alcoholic beverages while taking prescription medications • Never share your prescription medications with anyone • Taking prescription pain medications with other depressants such as sleep aids, anti-anxiety medications, or cold medicine can be dangerous • Tell your healthcare provider about ALL medicines and supplements you take

  22. Safe Storage • Keep your prescription drugs in a secure location to make sure kids, family, and guests don’t have access to your medications • Know where your prescription medications are at all times • Keep prescription pills in the original bottle with the label attached, and the child resistant cap secured • Keep track of how many prescription pills are in your bottle so you are immediately aware if any are missing

  23. Safe Disposal • Please take your medications to a permanent collection site (drop box) or a special community take-back event • Call your city or county law enforcement professionals • Do not flush prescription drugs down the toilet unless information on your prescription label or FDA specifically instructs you to do so. • Follow FDA guidelines when throwing the drugs in household trash

  24. What Can Communities Do? • Engage in community take-back events • Get involved • Town hall meetings • Community coalitions • Community-based prevention education • Support groups • Promote safe use, storage, and disposal • Promote the use of the PMP • Naloxone

  25. What Can Businesses Do? • Active promotion of a referral to treatment hotline (211) • Provide educational information of prescription drug abuse/misuse • Explanation of substance abuse services in new employee orientation • Onsite support services (employee benefits, employee assistance program, counselor, clinician, etc.)

  26. What Can Businesses Do? • Adopt workplace prescription drug policies • Prohibited behavior • Major medical insurance • Pharmacy benefit program • EAP • Crisis intervention • Assessment, referral • Short-term and follow-up counseling • Treatment monitoring

  27. What Should Parents Do? • Educate yourself • Defining • Risks • Signs and Symptoms • Prevention • Communicate the risks of prescription drug abuse/misuse to your kids • Children who know the risks of drugs at home are up to 50% less likely to use drugs than those who do not get the education • Safeguard your medicine cabinet • Keep prescription medicine in a secure location; lock them up • Count and monitor the number of pills you have • Ask your friends and family members to do the same • Get help • 211 • 1-855-DRUGFREE (1-855-378-4373)

  28. Signs and Symptoms of a Drug Overdose Emergency • Won’t awaken when aroused • Bluish purple skin tones for lighter skinned people and grayish or ashen tones for darker skinned people • Slow, shallow, erratic, or absent breathing • Snore-like gurgling or choking sounds • Elevated body temperature • Vomiting • Irrational behavior or confusion • Signs and symptoms of drug overdose may differ depending upon the type of drug consumed. • Emergency:If you suspect someone is experiencing a drug overdose, you must react to this true medical emergency by calling “911” without delay.

  29. Contact Information • Call 211 for treatment referrals • Call OBNDD directly to report diversion • 1-800-522-8031 • http://www.ok.gov/obndd/

  30. Brother Aunt Son People Uncle Daughter

  31. Case Studies A male in his 40s with a history of knee pain due to years of working laying carpet. He had recently been released from rehab for his prescription pain medication addiction, but was prescribed more pain medications for his knee and back pain. He was home with his wife and not feeling well. His wife was doing laundry and could hear him snoring loudly. She noticed he was no longer snoring, went to check on him, and found him unresponsive. His death was pronounced by EMS. His toxicology report included five different prescriptions medications, two of which were opioids.

  32. Case Studies An older adult female had recently been to the doctor and prescribed two new medications, fentanyl patches and oxycodone for pain. She was also previously prescribed hydrocodone. She fell asleep on the couch and her husband carried her to the bedroom and put her to bed. She slept most of the day, and her husband woke late that evening and noticed she would not move when he asked her. He called 911 and she was pronounced by EMS.

  33. Case Studies A female in her 30s suffered from arthritis and bipolar disorder. She went to rehab approximately a year before her death after overmedicating several times. Her husband worked out of town, but said she was in great spirits when he came home for the weekend. She complained of some pain from her arthritis, and told her husband she knows her body and doses herself. He woke in the middle of the night to her snoring, and several hours later became concerned when she did not get up to check on their crying baby. She was unresponsive with blue face, lips, and tongue. Her toxicology report included an antidepressant, opioid, and muscle relaxant.

  34. Case Studies A male in his 30s with a history of a work-related back injury 5-10 years previous. He had multiple surgeries on his back and neck since the injury. He was home alone and found unresponsive by family on their arrival to the home. He did not have a known history of substance abuse or mental health problems. He had a prescription for both of the drugs involved in his death.

  35. Case Studies A young adult male veteran had recurring pain from an injury sustained during a tour in Iraq. He suffered from depression and had a history of overmedicating. He was found unresponsive in the middle of the night and pronounced on arrival by a first responder. His death involved multiple prescription drugs, including prescription painkillers and antidepressants. He had a known prescription for almost all of the drugs.

  36. Addressing the Problem

  37. State Plan • Community/Public Education • Provider/Prescriber Education • Disposal/Storage for the Public • Disposal/Storage for Providers • Tracking and Monitoring • Regulatory/Enforcement • Treatment/Interventions

  38. Legislation • HB 1781 Share PMP data • HB 1782 Expand use of naloxone • HB 1783 Limit hydrocodone refills • HB 1491 Notify providers of possible doctor shoppers

  39. Case Study

  40. Project Lazarus

  41. Community Organization • Town hall meetings • Task forces/coalitions • Tool kit for primary care prescribers • Pain management guidelines • Sample patient-prescriber agreement • Patient education materials • Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment information • Support group for pain patients

  42. Community-based Prevention Education • Schools • Colleges • Civic organizations • Churches • Red Ribbon campaign • Media • Billboards

  43. Prescriber Education • One-on-one prescriber education on pain management • Continuing medical education • Promotion of prescription monitoring program

  44. Reduce Excess Supply and Increase Treatment • Enhanced hospital policy • Limit on amount dispensed • Required check of PMP • Take-back events by law enforcement • Fixed disposal sites • Drug detox and treatment programs

  45. Naloxone Program • More than half of deaths occurred at home • Emergency medical care not called or not able to reach victim in time to reverse the overdose • Bystanders did not recognize as lethal overdose • Concern for liability • Free naloxone for high risk patients

  46. Results: Opioid Prescribing The overdose death rate dropped 71% in two years after the start of Project Lazarus and the Chronic Pain Initiative. Source: Wilkes Co. Health Department; NC SCHS; CDC Wonder

  47. Key Components • High prescription opioid unintentional poisoning rates • Some degree of community awareness • Coalition building capacity • Motivated community organizer • Support from the medical establishment • Strong data utilization practices

  48. OSDH Support • State plan action items • Assist with local plans • Link with DMH contacts • Presentations • Train-the-trainer • Regional provider training • Educational materials • Provide local data • Death, hospital discharge, PMP • Technical assistance

  49. Avy Redus, MS Oklahoma State Department of Health Project Coordinator 405-271-3430 AvyD@health.ok.gov Claire Nguyen, MS Oklahoma State Department of Health Injury Epidemiologist (405) 271-3430 ClaireN@health.ok.gov http://poison.health.ok.gov

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