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On about April 19th 2002 SOMEONE hacked into the old guestbooks and DELETED
them. What they deleted was over 500 DEATH and ADDICTION stories relating
directly to OXYCONTIN. They also deleted over 100 stories from people who
are legitimate patients and most of them need oxycontin for their SEVERE
PAIN. I apologize to anyone who took the time to share their stories to HELP
warn others. Those guestbooks were somehow a comfort to all who have been
affected by this ABUSE epidemic. Please if you are looking for your story
then REPOST it. I'm sad to say but by the amount of email I am receiving
these guestbook's will rapidly rebuild their SAD tales BUT people need to be
warned as to the power of this drug and the deadly consequences when ABUSED.
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Please read the other stories and add yours to our guestbook...
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Name:Kim
Email:[email protected]
Type:Abuse Story
Date:8/28/2002
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broken ribs, broken collar bone, and a ruptured spleen. I was put in physical therapy for several months and was becoming stronger, but I was always in chronic pain. Six months
After my car accident the Doctors had to re-brake my collar bone and do a bone graph . I returned to physical therapy but the pain never would stop. Workman�s comp. okayed it for me to go to a pain clinic where they prescribed oxycotin plus fiorcet, a muscle re-laxer flexural, and adavant. After being on all this medication for two years the Doctor prescribed a higher dose of oxy. That made it 60 milligrams a day. I, for the last year was always falling asleep, not remembering movies that I had watched, and was not able to drive. From the combination of all these medications and especially the adavant along with oxy I was pretty much out of it most of the time. I would have seizures from the withdrawal.. I felt like I was never going to be able to worth anything to anyone again, and I was deeply depressed from all the intake of the medication. When I would be without for just one day I became severely ill and could not even function. My family found In April 1999 I was in a severe car accident where I suffered from a broken neck, 2 Narconon in Oklahoma for me, and it took all my savings to go try the place. The first week I was in Medical detox and I became very sick to my stomach. I was dizzy and feeling very anxious plus unable to sleep at all. On the third day I had another seizure and was taken to the hospital. They prescribed dilantin for my anti-seizure medication. ON the 8th day I went to the Narconon facility and spent eight more days of withdrawal where they gave me vitamins and cal-mag every six hours. My muscles felt like they were frozen and I still had not slept any. My hair felt like straw, I was dehydrated, lost fifteen pounds, still suffered from major anxiety attacks. My heart palpitated and my hands shook so much that I could not even write my name. My eye sight was very week and my memory was slothful. I was not allowed any sugar or caffeine while I stayed in the withdrawal part of the program and I stayed awake for fifteen days straight without one hour of sleep.
The fifteen days felt like I was in a dream world. I have never been so scared in my life, but by talking to all the people there I found all the symptoms were normal. It really helped talking to people that had went through the same thing. There was a kid from South Carolina in there that had been shooting Oxy . His symptoms were almost identical to mine even though I had been taking them just as the Dr. prescribed. . I would have never taken oxy if the Dr. had told me it was the same drug as heroine Since I have went through thirty days of being clean I found the pain was much less without the medicine and my heart began to beat at a normal rate. My legs and feet did not feel like they weighed a hundred pounds each any more, and I was able to see and write as normal. If I had never went to get off of this medicine I do think I would have died soon. The Dr, at the medical withdrawal told me I might have lasted one more week. Now I feel so much better and happier than I have felt in years. I am actually excited about the little things in life again. I spent my life savings on saving my life and it is very
Well worth every cent. I am a mother with three children and two grandchildren ages two and one. I wish I could stress to people that the medication caused me more pain and
depression than the accident did. I was very scared of getting off of the medicine and my fear made me a slave to it. Now I can honestly say that I am just as scared to ever take medication like this again, and fear can rule your life. Now at least the fear is for the
better. I also have been able to stop all the medication that I had to take for stomach upset. I am weaning off my dilantin now and am not having to take anything but
occasional ibuprofen for pain. It would have been the end of me if I had not detoxed this medication. My equilibrium was always imbalanced and I had no drive left in me what so ever. Please understand that after thirty days I feel like a new person with a life again. I do not know if the medication is good for anyone, but I do understand your fear and how pain can control your life. Unless you suffer from a sever case of cancer I would not take this medication for Pain. Your pain, I think, would be so much less than you would ever imagine. Please write me at [email protected] if you have any questions about my story. I would love to talk with people that have gone through this or
people that would like to get off of this life sucking drug.
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Name:Concerned
Email:48 hrs
Type:Administrator
Date:8/27/2002
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From 48hrs....
Prescription for trouble?; alleged addictiveness of OxyContin for pain
ANCHORS: DAN RATHER
REPORTERS: PETER VAN SANT
BODY:
PRESCRIPTION FOR TROUBLE?
(Footage of pills)
DAN RATHER, host:
(Voiceover) Seven years ago, the powerful painkiller OxyContin didn't even
exist. Today, the Drug Enforcement Administration says abuse of the legal drug
is growing faster than any other prescription remedy in decades.
Accounts continue to multiply of rehab centers filling up with OxyContin
addicts. After all, the experts say, it just takes one new prescription to
expand the drug's circulation. To be sure, millions of Americans are finding
pain relief, thanks to this drug some say is nothing less than a miracle. But
now there is another group of people who say they, too, have been caught in
OxyContin's grip--addicted, legal users caught unaware. Peter Van Sant
investigates.
(Footage of home; dog; Reynolds family)
PETER VAN SANT reporting:
(Voiceover) Diane Reynolds is not your typical drug addict.
Ms. DIANE REYNOLDS: I've never been addicted to coffee, Pepsi, nothing.
(Footage of Reynolds)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) She's a stay-at-home mom from Portland, Maine, raising
her three kids with her husband, Craig.
Ms. REYNOLDS: I want you to play this one right here, OK?
Seat's in the back.
(Footage of Reynolds and children)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Diane was prescribed OxyContin after back surgery three
years ago.
Ms. REYNOLDS: Thinking back to my first year on OxyContin, it was a wonderful
drug. I took it.
(Footage of OxyContin bottle and pills)
Ms. REYNOLDS: (Voiceover) I had no pain. It made me feel wonderful.
(Footage of Reynolds and children)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Then everything changed.
Ms. REYNOLDS: (Voiceover) This drug had a hold on me, and it was telling me
what to do.
Three times a day, it told me, 'Stop what you're doing, and take this pill.'
And I had to sit down and wait for it to kick in.
(Footage of Reynolds taking medicine)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) After one year, OxyContin still relieved her pain but
at a frightening price. Diane says she had become addicted.
CRAIG: The drug dictated her life. She went to the couch, she went flat, she
had to get that pill.
(Footage of Reynolds)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) And when she tried to quit...
Ms. REYNOLDS: (Voiceover) I would have headaches and bone aches and
nauseous--completely nauseous, flu-like feelings.
(Footage of Swett; Reynolds)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) While Troy Swett abused OxyContin, Diane took the drug
as prescribed.
Ms. REYNOLDS: (Voiceover) I never took one pill extra.
I never abused it.
(Footage of pills)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) But they both ended up craving OxyContin.
Ms. REYNOLDS: I was showing my kids, you know, a behavior of somebody that is
addicted to a drug.
(Footage of Purdue building; legal documents; pills)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Diane is considering suing Purdue Pharma, the makers of
OxyContin. Dozens of people are joining lawsuits claiming they became addicted
to the painkiller after taking the drug as prescribed.
Dr. DAVID HADDOX (Purdue Pharma Spokesman): Patients who are taking OxyContin
appropriately don't get addicted.
(Footage of Haddox and Van Sant)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Dr. David Haddox is a spokesman for Purdue Pharma.
Does Purdue Pharma owe anything to people like Diane Reynolds, who took
OxyContin as prescribed and believes that she became addicted to it and had
terrible physical withdrawal when she tried to get off of it?
Dr. HADDOX: A person who tells us that they've had withdrawal trying to get
off of OxyContin may, in fact, be confusing physical dependence for addiction.
But in my practice of prescribing this for over 1,000 patients, I never saw that
happen in my practice. Patients got relief, and I didn't have a single case of
addiction.
Mr. RICHARD BLUMENTHAL (Connecticut Attorney General): For a substantial
proportion of the people who take it, OxyContin is addictive.
(Footage of Blumenthal; Purdue building; commercial)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, who
has been carefully monitoring the company's marketing activities, says Purdue
Pharma has downplayed the risks of addiction. One example...
(Excerpt from OxyContin commercial)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) ...this video, which has been seen by thousands of pain
patients.
Unidentified Man: (From commercial) Less than 1 percent of patients taking
opioids actually become addicted.
VAN SANT: What do you think of that statement?
Mr. BLUMENTHAL: Well, the scientific literature and the most recent studies
show that the percentage of addiction is more like 13 percent, not 1 percent.
There's no question that this kind of video belittles, demeans, diminishes the
very severe potential for abuse in this drug.
(Footage of Purdue Pharma; documents; Blumenthal and Van Sant)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Purdue Pharma disputes Blumenthal figures and provided
us with a number of studies showing addiction rates that are significantly
lower. But in the warning packed with every bottle, the company admits, quote,
"...data are not available to establish the true incidence of addition in
chronic pain patients," end quote. Blumenthal believes the drug has been
inappropriately marketed.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL: Until very recently, the marketing and promotion effort was
extraordinarily aggressive--trips for doctors, dinners--designed, really, to
interest and, in some cases, lure doctors into increasing the levels of
prescriptions.
(Footage of Blumenthal and Van Sant; advertisement)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) But it's not just Blumenthal who has concerns about
Purdue's marketing of OxyContin. This ad that appeared in The New England
Journal of Medicine was singled out by the Food and Drug Administration.
The ad says, 'Proven effective in arthritis pain.'
Dr. HADDOX: Right.
VAN SANT: What did the Food and Drug Administration think of this ad?
Dr. HADDOX: They objected to the ad after it got into print. We disagreed
with them, but we pulled the ad immediately when they told us that they didn't
think it was representing the facts the way they're supposed to be represented.
(Footage of letter with highlighted section)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) The FDA said the ad's claims about the drug's use as a
treatment for arthritis were 'not demonstrated by substantial evidence.'
The word the FDA used was 'misleading,' correct?
Dr. HADDOX: Yes, that is correct.
(Footage of government building; sign reading: Committee on Health,
Education, Labor and Pensions; ad)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Since we last aired this broadcast eight months ago,
the FDA has indicated in testimony before Congress that with the exception of
this particular ad, Purdue Pharma has followed FDA regulations.
Dr. WILLIAM HARRIS: How are you doing, Leon?
(Footage of Harris and Leon)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Dr. William Harris from Charleston, West Virginia, says
he was pressured by a Purdue Pharma salesman to prescribe the drug for his
patients with arthritis.
Dr. WILLIAM HARRIS: When I said, 'I--that's entirely inappropriate, and I'm
not going to do it,' then we got into a heated exchange.
(Footage of Harris)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) In fact, the salesman said the doctor could be sued for
undertreating pain.
Dr. HARRIS: He was overly aggressive.
VAN SANT: Overly committed?
Dr. HADDOX: I think they are committed.
VAN SANT: Overly aggressive?
Dr. HADDOX: I don't think so. I think they are right on the money.
(Footage of pills; Purdue building)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) OxyContin has been a gold mine for Purdue Pharma, with
more than $1 billion in sales in the last year alone.
Mr. ASA HUTCHINSON (Drug Enforcement Administration): Clearly it has been
overprescribed.
(Footage of Hutchinson and Van Sant)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Asa Hutchinson, head of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, is concerned that a number of those prescriptions are ending up
in the hands of addicts.
Mr. HUTCHINSON: Whenever I ask my agents in the field, 'Well, what is unique
about this?' they say it's better than heroin. And so it is extraordinarily
powerful, it is extraordinarily d--addictive.
(Footage of drug being warmed up; newspaper headline)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) The DEA says the explosion of OxyContin abuse
nationwide has reached an epidemic.
Mr. HUTCHINSON: (Voiceover) People are dying.
We're getting the death certificates in.
VAN SANT: Despite your good intentions, didn't your company create a monster
here that is, in fact, killing people today and turning people into addicts?
Dr. HADDOX: No. The monster in this country is the epidemic of untreated
pain. There are 50 million people in the United States who have unrelieved
pain. Unfortunately, strong pain medications are sought by addicts.
VAN SANT: Purdue Pharma is responding to the problem. They're spending
millions on a campaign to educate teens about the dangers of prescription drug
abuse, and the company has begun testing a new version of OxyContin, which
they say will be more difficult to abuse.
Ms. REYNOLDS: I never abused this drug. I never did anything that I wasn't
told to do.
Unidentified Child: This is fun.
(Footage of Reynolds and children)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) But that's little comfort to Diane Reynolds, who
recently completed a detox program.
Ms. REYNOLDS: I'm very upset that I am in this position. It's harmed me in a
lot of ways. It's harmed my family. It's--it's affected my whole entire
family.
(Footage of Swett; Kathy)
VAN SANT: (Voiceover) Coming up, a radical procedure that this mother hopes
can cure her son's addiction.
Ms. KATHY BERNIER: I just want to hear from Troy. I haven't talked to him.
(Footage of Kathy; pills)
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Name:Nat
Email:
Type:Death Story
Date:8/27/2002
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My brother died August 23, 2002 of an Oxycontin overdose, although toxicology reports have not been returned as of yet to determine what other "drugs" were accompanied by Oxycontin consumption. He was 37 years old, and earlier this year another friend died from the same thing. The problem (as one person) pont out is NOT that someone is putting a gun to their head, but the PHYSICIANS who are writing for this medication on a regular basis for "patiens" (term used loosly) who then turn around and sell the tablets for $20.00/per. Drug abuse is an insidious addiction AND PEOPLE BELIEVE IT OR NOT..sometimes you CANNOT beat it...it is and should be classified as a DISEASE. We need "WATCHDOG" groups within the system that monitor these physicians who write RX after RX. A "flag" should go up in a computer program for Doctors in each state who write more than 10-20 (random number) monthly and thoroughly investigate the Physician and the records of patients...this is literally "LIFE OR DEATH" people and regarless if you're pationate about this or not, we as citizens and family members can make a difference. QUAALUDES killed people in he 70's and that particular medication was TAKEN OFF THE MARKET (because of deaths). This is a drug that is lethal, sold excessively on the street and familes are left to mourn in a very emotional state. When this drug is prescribed/sold it doesn't come with the "WARNING" that it could be fatal. The tablets are so small the almost are the size of Ibuprofen, and most people think...this little pill can't be a killer, I'll take 40 or 80 mgs have a drink, and end up dead. My recommendation is to remove this drug, whether patients think it's miraculous or not, and prescribe other options and or medications. My family is left shattered and extemely PO'd at both my brother and the company who produces this killer WITH THE GOVERNMENT'S FULL SUPPORT. I wonder how much clout Pharma has in Washington? |
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