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New Data Reveal Doubling of Emergency Department Visits
Involving Pharmaceutical Abuse
According to new data from the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) Drug Abuse Warning
Network (DAWN), visits by individuals to hospital emergency
rooms involving the misuse or abuse of pharmaceutical drugs
have doubled over the past five years and, for the third
year in a row, exceed the number of visits involving illicit
drugs.
According to DAWN, which provides national estimates on
individuals who experience drug-related medical emergencies
that are severe enough to require treatment in an emergency
department, there were approximately 1.2 million visits by
individuals to hospital emergency rooms involving
pharmaceutical drugs in 2009. This compares to about
974,000 visits involving illicit drugs in 2009.
Additionally, while visits to emergency rooms involving
illicit drugs have remained relatively stable at just under
1 million visits per year from 2004 to 2009, visits
involving pharmaceutical drugs have almost doubled
increasing by 98 percent over the past five years. In
2009, there were approximately 1.2 million visits to
emergency rooms involving pharmaceutical drugs, compared to
627,000 in 2004. These visits do not include adverse
reactions to pharmaceuticals taken as prescribed.
Prescription drug abuse is our Nation's
fastest-growing drug problem, with shocking consequences
measured by overdose deaths, emergency room visits,
treatment admissions, and increases in youth drug use, said
Gil Kerlikowske, Director of National Drug Control Policy.
The Obama Administration is mounting an unprecedented
effort to address this public health epidemic, and as we
coordinate a national response to reduce drug use and its
consequences, we need communities to be our partners in this
effort. Parents should act today to protect young
people by talking to their kids about the consequences of
drug use, even legal drugs such as prescription drugs, and
by properly disposing of unused, expired, or unneeded
medications found at home.
The Obama Administration is mounting an unprecedented
government-wide effort to combat prescription drug abuse.
These efforts include:
·
Increasing prescription drug return, take-back, and disposal
programs across the Nation. Prescription drugs that are
commonly abused are often found in the family medicine
cabinet. In October 2010, President Obama signed into
law the Secure and Responsible Drug Disposal Act, which will
support local efforts to curb prescription drug abuse by
providing Americans with safe, environmentally sound ways to
dispose of unused, unneeded, or expired prescription drugs
found at home.
·
Expanding state-based prescription drug monitoring programs.
Currently, monitoring programs are operating in 34 states.
The Administration supports expanding these programs in
every state, and is seeking to ensure new and existing
monitoring programs effectively use the data they acquire
and share information across state lines.
·
Educating prescribers about opiate painkiller prescribing.
The Administrations FY 2011 Budget request asks Congress
for funding to train prescribers on how to instruct patients
in the use and proper disposal of painkillers, to observe
signs of dependence, and to use state-based prescription
drug monitoring programs to detect when an individual is
going from doctor to doctor in search of prescriptions (also
called doctor shopping).
·
Assisting states in cracking down on doctor shopping and
so-called pill mills. Criminal organizations have
established thriving businesses of transporting people to
states with little regulation to obtain prescription drugs
from multiple doctors or from pill mills, which distribute
drugs indiscriminately. ONDCP is working closely with
Federal, state, local, and tribal authorities to address
this problem
DAWN data are based on a national sample of general,
non-Federal hospitals operating 24-hour emergency
departments. In each participating hospital, emergency
department medical records are reviewed retrospectively to
determine visits that involved recent drug use. All types of
drugs illegal drugs, prescription and over-the-counter
pharmaceuticals, and non-pharmaceutical inhalants are
included.
Click
here to see the full
DAWN report.
For more information on how to properly dispose of
prescription drugs click
here.
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Tony Martinez
Associate Director
202-395-5758
mmartinez@ondcp.eop.gov
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Michael Gottlieb
Deputy Associate Director
202-395-4868
mgottlieb@ondcp.eop.gov
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Katie Greene
Deputy Associate Director
202-395-6652
kgreene@ondcp.eop.gov
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Office of Intergovernmental
and Public Liaison
Office National Drug Control
Policy
Executive Office of the
President
www.WhiteHouseDrugPolicy.Gov
ONDCP seeks to foster
healthy individuals and safe
communities by effectively
leading the Nation's effort
to reduce drug use and its
consequences.
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