Thursday, January 18, 2018

The Opiate issue in America being lost on this administration (rough draft)

The History of Opiate Addiction
Grand Canyon University: <PCN-527>
January 17, 2018





Introduction
            Opiate addiction in America has become one of the hottest topics because of the death rate and destruction caused by these drugs. The history of opiates is complicated, and laws have been passed and thrown out due to the topic. The psychopharmacology of opiates is discussed through the view of detoxification including terms of how to manage tolerance levels and withdrawal symptoms. Current trends and issues arise in the political view of health care and how opiate addiction effects society in a negative manner. With health care being a hot topic in congress today the issue of opiate use is slowly being addresses from the dollar expense view of the health care system. Medication Assistant Treatment (MAT) is used in professional counseling arenas to aid clients in detoxification and becoming healthy and clean. Without strict legislative measures passed, America is looking at a long-term addiction that many will die from and the financial implications are troubling for health care and tax payers.
The History of Opiates
When opioids first hit American soil in the late 1800s, they were hailed as a wonder drug., and morphine was widely used in wars and created addicts by the dozens. David Courtright’s vast knowledge of how America became in a sort of romance with these compound drugs, mainly opiates are clear account of the road these drugs took in America. There are arguments that claim demographics and the ease of obtaining these drugs have affected the U.S. drug policy, and this has become a topic that has stretched from the past to the present, (Campbell, 2003). In the last 50 years, America has watched the opiate addiction move from the inner cities to a demographic including outside urban areas with an age range from the late 20’s. This included White women and men that had not been drastically affected before, (Cicero, et al, 2014). “Heroin use has changed from an inner-city, minority-centered” (A Retrospective Analysis of the past 50 years, p.821). The dramatic rise in heroin has happened in just the last 20 years. This mostly due to the interrelationship between prescription opiates and the cheaper to get heroin on the streets. Oxy Cotton has been to blame because of its very release into the pharmaceutical world at an extreme rapid rate. According to the studies conducted by Cicero, et al, 2014, “Of those who began their opioid abuse in the 1960s, more than 80% indicated that they initiated their abuse with heroin. In a near complete reversal, 75% of those who began their opioid abuse in the 2000s reported that their first regular opioid was a prescription drug, (p. 823). The prescription drug world added to the black-market drugs and took a destructible hold on these communities and families.
The next issue of dealing with opiates and the help needed for addicts is how to deal the psychopharmacology of Opiates.
Psychopharmacology of Opiates
            The whole focus is to eliminate the effects of opioid drugs in a safe and effective manner. All opiates, including heroin and methadone, are agonist that stimulate opioid receptors. Buprenorphine is a partial agonist at the µ opioid receptor subtype, which means that the system is not fully stimulated even when all the receptors are occupied. Dependence and withdrawal of opiates of all types have been studied closely by Holmes, et al, (2012). Buprenorphine is worth highlighting in this context for its pioneering contributions to addiction treatment, (Volkow, 2014). Galanin which is neuropeptide, which is expressed in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and in the central nervous system, which also affects the limbic system. This means these all the areas of the brain that regulate the reward centers which affects addicts on opiates. They concluded that galanin needed to be addressed when treating addicts with opiate addictions.
Methadone has been used for years to combat many of these addictions yet as found in Canada only 25% of addicts will even attempt to get this treatment, and, “in North America, only about 20-25% of the estimated heroin
user population are in opiate pharmacotherapy/methadone treatment”, (Fisher, et al, 2002, p 496). The motivation behind this thinking is might be that they hear bad information from others, fear being arrested as addicts, social concerns, e.g., hiding their addictions to not lose jobs or family. Functioning prescription addicts exist among us in all walks of life. With the current trends and issues in America dealing with opiate abuse the future is looking bleak.
Current Trends and Issues in America dealing with Opiates
             Current trends have this issue in the news daily and was a big part of the 2016 Presidential race. According to Volkow (2014), “It is estimated that between 26.4 million and 36 million people abuse opioids worldwide with an estimated 2.1 million people in the United States suffering from substance use disorders related to prescription opioid pain relievers in 2012 and an estimated 467,000 addicted to heroin,” (para. 3). It is common knowledge that when legislative bills have been presented to congress to reduce the opiate crisis, lobbyist from the pharmaceutical companies have won by using bribes at fund raising dinners for politicians running for office. The idea is that it is legal to pay $20,000 dollars for a dinner when they are paying to have their own needs met in the opiate war. These prescription opiates have caused more deaths than heroin or cocaine in just the last 25 years. Opioids include drugs such as OxyContin and Vicodin that are mostly prescribed for the treatment of moderate to severe pain, in which once a person is on these widely prescribed drugs and their prescription is expensive they turn to the streets to get more affordable drugs and their tolerance level is now higher, (Volkow, 2014).
            Professional of the counseling fields are integrating drug treatment plans to combat this horrific addiction. The use of office based settings to safely treat opiate users with the goals of lowering their tolerance levels is another tool used to fight this deadly addiction. Medication-assisted treatment will be most effective, (Volkow, 2014 Integrating Drug Treatment into Healthcare Settings). Strategies being used to combat addiction include making needles free and available to users so other issues such AIDS are reduced amongst users. According to Kosten, 2005, “the U.S. federal government has not embraced this harm reduction approach, and in many regions of the country prescriptions are still required for the purchase of needles,” (p. 308).  States such as California have this policy but usually these privately funded programs are hard to come by. The urgency is just not appreciated by many societies. Issues still being faced are as follows:
·         Low-support for treatment reduction plans
·         Lobbyist still paying to keep pumping these drugs in high rates to treat patients
·         Current administration’s lack of concern for addicts
·         Current funding to aid is just not approved by Congress
·         Buprenorphine is so highly limited to about 30 patients per doctor that doctors call it a ridiculous waste of time, (Vastag, 2003).
    All the above issues play a role in this devastating crisis still killing so many people daily. Take home medications, and certain prescriptions are not being allowed in widespread forms to help the millions addicted to opiates. Doctors must take more courses on drugs that do work and being limited on when and where these coarse can be taken has caused another block on safe and effective treatment for addicts. As Lighthall, 2017 observes the word “epidemic” he states, “from the Greek translation, something that is over and upon the people,” (The True Tale of America’s Opiate Epidemic). The Opiate epidemic is truly upon and over us now. How opiate addictions affect society and families is a concern because the devastation can be seen nation-wide.
                     How Opiates Effect Society and Issues that are Relevant
       Substance exposed newborns present challenges for hospitals. Detoxification for babies is a long-term complicated problem that requires the babies to stay in the hospital long after the addicted mother is released. This in-patient care and presents a financial burden on the hospital’s and the medical field in general. The long-term health issue for these children affected by opiate abuse means they will need care all through their lives and this costly to America’s health care system. According to Franca, Mustafa, and McManus, 2016, “Increasing opiate use among women of reproductive age has led to a rise in adverse pregnancy outcomes, including neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS),” (p. 80). When a child is reported as an opiate addicted baby, the report is mandatory to be sent to child and family services which means the child is now placed in the system and the addicted mother must prove her self to get the baby back. This includes moths of treatment programs, inpatient and outpatient, court dates to follow up with addicted mother, families are torn apart, and sadness is inevitable. These take a toll on society both financially and psychologically.
Crime and Opiates
     There is a relationship between all drugs and crime including alcohol. Recently the relationship with crime and opiate abuse has been reported to be daily. Some of the crimes committed include:
·         Child abuse
·         Driving under the influence of opiates both prescribed and illegal Heroin is a bargain, at least in the beginning stages of addiction. A single “hit” (or bag) is currently about $10.
·         Purchasing of cheaper street drugs
·         Stealing from people and commercial places to obtain drugs
·         Identity theft/credit card fraud
·         Domestic violence, e.g., families in crisis
     The counseling profession is very involved in the attempt to eradicate opiate use and help addicted persons to get this monkey off their back.
     The Counseling profession and Opiate Relevance
     Ultra-rapid and rapid detoxification using precipitated withdrawal should not be routinely offered. Settings at home are dangerous when users try to detox, and the mix of other drugs can cause fatal outcomes.  According to “The Austrian method is used to detox and has window of 12 hours for the patient to stay clean until the procedure in attempt to reduce the withdrawal attributes. This is usually summed up as a sedation method. Davis (2005), “In 1988, Austrian physician Norbert Loimer was studying opiate withdrawal when he discovered that injecting addicts with naloxone – the intravenous form of the opiate blocker naltrexone – achieved what he referred to as “acute detoxification.” (detoxification). This method has had proven success and has been referred by the counseling profession.
     Effective treatment focuses on the genetic and environmental causes of addiction. Basically, we are right back to the nature versus nurture issue. Counseling also treats the physical and mental side-effects of opiate addictions. Counselors seek to fins the underlying reasons why the person began opiates even when there is an accident that started the person first on prescription opiates. The next step is why the person continued and became an abuser of the medication. The future implications of opiate use are bleak because of political issues and the old famous art of greed by lobbyist.
The Future Implications of Opiate Abuse in America
     The implications are devastation in the following ways;
·         Economic issues on the country
·         The long-term effect on persons addicted
·         Total U.S. expenditures that include multiple diseases caused from opiate addictions

     The economic issue is widespread because of all the factors that are born from people that are addicted. By this, there are HIV, babies addicted, chronic illness from the drugs that affect every aspect of the body and the care that is needed to treat the issues. This is a heavy burden on a society that already faces nation debt at an alarming rate. Today’s administration is bent on cutting back money from programs that help afford care to people that have addictions to opiates even when most are from prescriptions handed to them in a careless manner. If America does not show the medical compassion needed to handle this addiction issue and eradicate from our society we will face a country that can possibly implode from opiate addictions. Opiate addiction has touched the lives of all walks of life in this great country and to heal we need to learn, listen and help. Our future counselors are part of the solution if they are respectfully heard.
                                                              Conclusion
     Opiate addiction has become the worst addiction to hit America since the early 1800’s. When morphine was used as a go-to drug for our military and later citizens. The history of these drugs along with pharmacology, current trends, issues, relevance to the counseling profession and the future implications of this deadly drug look bleak if more attention by our federal government is not acquired. The destruction of families in all functions including new born babies and the long-term effects this drug has is at a critical point in our history of this these drugs. Many doctors disagree of which methods are effective and some of these reasons are because of the amounts of preventive care or sedation methods that can be administered. The 30-patient rule per doctor to receive buprenorphine is so highly limited to about 30 patients per doctor that doctors call it a ridiculous waste of time, (Vastag, 2003). Politicians and lobbyist are in a money world to meet the needs of greedy politicians and pharmaceutical companies that have no morals when confronted with the devastation caused by opiates in America. To beat this opiate killing addiction in America we need minds of counselors and doctors to stand up and fight to rid out country of this deadly drug called opiates. Alternative pain relievers are available.


    



                                                             References
Campbell, N. D. (2003). Dark Paradise: A History of Opiate Addiction in America (review). Bulletin of the History of Medicine 77(1), 218-219. The Johns Hopkins University Press. Retrieved December 13, 2017, from Project MUSE database.
Cicero, T. J., Ellis, M. S., Surratt, H. L., Kurtz, S. P. (2014). The changing face of heroin use in the United States: A retrospective analysis of the past 50 years. JAMA Psychiatry 71, 821–826
Davis, J. (2005). Instant Detox. Retrieved from https://www.wired.com/2005/01/detox/
Fischer, B., Chin, A. T., Kuo, I., Kirst, M., & Vlahov, D. (2002). Canadian illicit opiate users' views on methadone and other opiate prescription treatment: an exploratory qualitative study. Substance Use & Misuse, 37(4), 495-522.
Franca, U.L., Mustafa, S., & McManus, M.L. (2016, November). The Growing Burden of Neonatal Opiate Exposure on Children and Family Services in Massachusetts. Child Maltreatment, 21(1), 80-84. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1177/1077559515615437
Hansen, R.N. (2011, october). Economic Costs of Nonmedical Use of Prescription Opioids. The Clinical journal of pain, 27(3), 194-202. doi:
Holmes, F. E., Armenaki, A., Iismaa, T. P., Einstein, E. B., Shine, J., Picciotto, M. R., . . . Zachariou, V. (2012). Galanin negatively modulates opiate withdrawal via galanin receptor 1. Psychopharmacology, 220(3), 619-25. doi:http://dx.doi.org.contentproxy.phoenix.edu/10.1007/s00213-011-2515-x
Kosten, T. R. (2005). What are America's opportunities for harm reduction strategies in opiate dependence?. American Journal On Addictions, 14(4), 307-310. doi:10.1080/10550490591003530
Lighthall, G.K. (2017, November). Dreamland: The True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic. International Anesthesia Research Society, 125(5), 1812-1813. doi:DOI: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000002421
Volkow, N.P. M. (2014 ). America’s Addiction to Opioids: Heroin and Prescription Drug Abuse. Retrieved from https://www.drugabuse.gov/about-nida/legislative-activities/testimony-to-congress/2016/americas-addiction-to-opioids-heroin-prescription-drug-abuse
Vastag, B. (2003, August). In-Office Opiate Treatment “Not a Panacea”: Physicians Slow to Embrace Therapeutic Option. JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 290(6), 731-735. doi:ISSN: 0098-7484


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