Safe USe

Misuse / OVERDOSE

When properly used, prescription painkillers can be effective tools for managing discomfort  and assisting with healing. However, if misused, they can be lethal. Know how to prevent and respond to an overdose to help save a life.

Proper storage and disposal is critical. Sixty-eight percent of those who misuse prescription painkillers obtain them from a friend or relative. Learn more about Safe Storage and Safe Disposal.

Prescription Painkillers and Teens
National surveys find teens believe prescription painkillers are safer to use than street drugs because a doctor prescribes them. Teens also report prescription drugs are “easier to get than beer” because they can take them from their friends’ and family’s medicine cabinets.

DRUG DEPENDENCE

Many of the most commonly prescribed painkillers, including OxyContin, Vicodin, Methadone, Darvocet, Dilaudid, Lortab, Lorcet and Percocet, can trigger the feeling of “needing” the drug.  Watch for these signs  in others, or yourself, to detect painkiller dependency:

  • Taking painkillers more often, even when not experiencing much discomfort
  • Spending more and more time obtaining prescriptions
  • Cash, valuables or medicine missing from the home
  • Mood and personality changes, becoming defensive
  • Excessive drowsiness and lack of appetite
  • Withdrawal from friends, family, or social activities
  • Neglecting responsibilities
  • Increasingly sensitive to normal sights, sounds, emotions
  • Blackouts and forgetfulness

WHERE TO GO FOR HELP

Several Oregon agencies offer help with addiction or dependency. To learn more, go to:

IMPORTANT FACTS

  • In 2013 more than 46 Americans died each day from overdosing on prescription pain relievers

  • 1-in-5 college students have misused prescription stimulants

  • More than 70,000 children are hospitalized each year due to accidental overdoses. Nearly half of those cases were caused by a small number of specific drugs including prescription painkillers Bupreorphine, Hydrocodone, and Oxycodone.

SOURCES