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These Pills Could Be Next U.S. Drug Epidemic,
#1
These Pills Could Be Next U.S. Drug Epidemic, Public Health Officials Say
[color=rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.65098)][img=375x0]safari-reader://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/post-launch-images/2018/07/sln_jul18_1/16x9_m.jpg?h=1024&w=1820&la=en&hash=C7C34FF1384E1C4E6F584FCCC98340C64BB5FBBA[/img][/color]

[color=rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.65098)]Clonazepam (traded as Klonopin), diazepam (Valium) and alprazolam (Xanax) are among the most sold drugs in a class of widely prescribed anti-anxiety medications known as benzodiazepines. Public health officials warn the pills should be used only in the short term and should never be mixed with opioids or alcohol.The Pew Charitable Trusts[/color]

The growing use of anti-anxiety pills reminds some doctors of the early days of the opioid crisis.
Considered relatively safe and non-addictive by the general public and many doctors, Xanax, Valium, Ativan and Klonopin have been prescribed to millions of Americans for decades to calm jittery nerves and promote a good night’s sleep. 
But the number of people taking the sedatives and the average length of time they’re taking them have shot up since the 1990s, when doctors also started liberally prescribing opioid painkillers
As a result, some state and federal officials are now warning that excessive prescribing of a class of drugs known as benzodiazepines or “benzos” is putting more people at risk of dependence on the pills and is exacerbating the fatal overdose toll of painkillers and heroin. Some local governments are beginning to restrict benzo prescriptions. 
When taken in combination with painkillers or illicit narcotics, benzodiazepines can increase the likelihood of a fatal overdose as much as tenfold, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. On their own, the medications can cause debilitating withdrawal symptoms that last for months or years.
Public health officials also warn that people who abruptly stop taking benzodiazepines risk seizures or even death. 
With heightened public awareness of the nation’s opioid epidemic, some state and local officials are insisting that these anti-anxiety medications start sharing some of the scrutiny.
“We have this whole infrastructure set up now to prevent overprescribing of opioids and address the need for addiction treatment,” said Dr. Anna Lembke, a researcher and addiction specialist at Stanford University. “We need to start making benzos part of that.”
“What we’re seeing is just like what happened with opioids in the 1990s,” she said. “It really does begin with overprescribing. Liberal therapeutic use of drugs in a medical setting tends to normalize their use. People start to think they’re safe and, because they make them feel good, it doesn’t matter where they get them or how many they use.” 
Dr. Anna Lembke,  researcher and addiction specialist Stanford University Wrote:"What we’re seeing is just like what happened with opioids in the 1990s."

The number of adults filling a benzodiazepine prescription increased by two-thirds between 1996 and 2013, from 8 million to nearly 14 million, according to a review of market data by Lembke and others in the New England Journal of Medicine. Despite the known dangers of co-prescribing painkillers and anti-anxiety medications, the rate of combined prescriptions nearly doubled between 2001 and 2013. 
Since then, prescriptions for benzodiazepines may have leveled off or declined slightly, according to recent data from a market research firm that tracks prescription drug sales, the IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science. At the same time, opioid prescribing has dropped by more than a fifth. 
Still, Lembke said, the level of prescribing is much higher than it was in the mid-1990s and benzo dependence appears to be rising based on her own clinical observations.
First marketed in the early 1960s, benzodiazepines have been cyclically abused throughout their history. What’s notable now, Lembke said, is that overuse of benzos is coinciding with overuse of opioids. 
But a newly formed group of researchers and pharmacologists, the International Task Force on Benzodiazepines, wrote in an editorial that recent negative publicity has made it difficult for many doctors around the world to prescribe medications they consider essential
Some scientific articles “achieved a common goal that negative propaganda frequently reaches: they aroused suspicion of benzodiazepines and suggested difficulties in using them, while overlooking their benefits,” the pharmacologists said. (Three of the 17 co-authors reported having consulted for or received support from drug companies.) 
Psychiatrists, including Lembke, agree that relatively inexpensive benzodiazepines can be effective at relieving acute cases of anxiety and sleeplessness. 
Physicians agree that benzos should not be used long term to solve psychiatric problems. Research indicates that use of the drugs for more than a few weeks can cause tolerance, including withdrawal symptoms between doses, and physical and psychological dependence.
Dr. Christy Huff,  co-director Benzodiazepine Information Coalition, Utah Wrote:"Doctors need to be informed that the medications should be prescribed for no more than two to four weeks. They were always meant to be short term."

To raise awareness of benzodiazepines’ dangers, Hawaii, Pennsylvania and New York City have issued prescribing guidelines that limit the duration of Xanax, Valium and other benzo prescriptions, similar to many state guidelines for opioids. 
In addition, the Massachusetts Legislature this month passed a wide-ranging opioid bill that included benzodiazepines as a class of restricted drugs.
Nationwide, most states require doctors and pharmacists to track opioid prescribing through online databases that monitor patients who receive them and doctors who prescribe them. Benzodiazepines are not included in half of the states, according to an analysis of state laws by The Pew Charitable Trusts, which also supports Stateline.
Mounting Dangers
As prescriptions for benzodiazepines have grown since the late 1990s, so have deaths, according to a study at Montefiore Medical Center in New York. The National Institute on Drug Abuse reports that overdose deaths involving benzodiazepines quadrupled from 2002 to 2015. 
New highly potent forms of benzodiazepines that are illicitly traded are also causing overdose deaths, addiction doctors say. Adding to the dangers, the Drug Enforcement Administration has reported that the deadly synthetic drug fentanyl has been found in counterfeit forms of Xanax.
Xanax and Valium were involved in more than 30 percent of opioid overdose deaths between 2010 and 2014, far more than cocaine and methamphetamines, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In some parts of the country, the prevalence of Xanax in drug overdose autopsy reports was even higher.
Xanax for the past several years has been found in more overdose autopsies in Kentucky than any specific opioid, according to Dr. Kelly Clark, president of the American Society of Addiction Medicine and an addiction doctor who lives in the state. “In fact, community mental health centers in Louisville stopped prescribing Xanax because it is such a common drug of abuse and so dangerous in combination with alcohol and opioids,” she said in an interview with Stateline
Better Information
Researchers and patient advocates argue more needs to be done to educate medical students and inform doctors and patients about the drugs’ dangers.
Dr. Christy Huff, who is in recovery from dependence on Xanax, co-directs the Utah-based Benzodiazepine Information Coalition. The nonprofit advocates for stronger warnings for patients who take Xanax and other benzos, as well as better education for prescribing physicians. 
“Our population of patients is experiencing extremely difficult withdrawals, and they have neurological injuries because of unsafe prescribing,” Huff said. “Doctors need to be informed that the medications should be prescribed for no more than two to four weeks. They were always meant to be short term.”
In 2016, the Food and Drug Administration issued a warning about the dangers of combining opioids and benzodiazepines. That prompted many doctors to force patients to choose one drug over the other without warning them about the potential symptoms of withdrawal such as seizures or even death, Huff said.
“Patients who are on the medications should be given the choice of how and when they are tapered off,” she said. “Too many doctors are taking people off their prescriptions too rapidly.”
The benzo task force wrote in its editorial that it was developing research that it hoped would support preserving the drugs as a valuable part of the medical arsenal.
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#2
Well my Doc only gives me 30 1mg so whatever it’s a good thing we have some great vendorsSmile
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#3
While I agree with most of the article, I also believe that some of it is overblown to an extreme level. 

"let's see, this person died of a heroin overdose.  yeah, and they had a benzo in their system too, so lets use that as a statistic to inflate our propaganda numbers!"

I'm not saying every person needs 10mgs a day of a benzo, but they might need a normal amount to survive daily living in a way the rest of the population does.  Anxiety is a real illness.  A neutral article would have been nicer, but I don't know the author's agenda, so.....
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#4
If doctors do begin tightening down on benz@ scripts, they need to do it properly. These are not items to be toyed with when ceased abruptly. They should inform patients well ahead of time, and let them gradually taper down the prescribed mg. Not everyone has access to supplemental sources and withdrawal reactions can be unpredictable and pure hell for many. These docs need to get their heads removed from their arses and put the patients well being first.
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#5
I thought gps had begun clamping down on prescribing any benzos, or someone above them had told them to cut down on prescribing them a while ago, more or less the same this side of the pond.Is nigh impossible to get them from a doc.
A counselor once said to me,you are abusing diazepam,how can i be abusing it if i only take 7.5mg a day i asked,he stumbled and fumbled for words before saying, its because you don't get them prescribed, see how they twist the reality ? They do it all the time, if i am in pain i will take a PK, if i am very anxious, stressed or feel panic coming on i will take a benzo, have i committed a moral sin in doing that ?
If there is more taking them i'd like to know how people actually get them, i think its more scare mongering, as was said above, if 10mg or whatever amount it is, helps someone deal with the world then why is that seen as such a sin?
We are all such sinners then here, meanwhile someone just ordered an drone strike on a wedding in Afghanistan and nobody bats an eye lid.
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#6
Absolutely not. Anyone who knows what true anxiety is would never ask these questions...
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#7
Lol, and you can buy Alcohol as much as you want, without any problem. But yes, the problems are benzos, lol.
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#8
(07-20-2018, 12:20 PM)G.Elias Wrote: I thought gps had begun clamping down on prescribing any benzos, or someone above them had told them to cut down on prescribing them a while ago, more or less the same this side of the pond.Is nigh impossible to get them from a doc.
A counselor once said to me,you are abusing diazepam,how can i be abusing it if i only take 7.5mg a day i asked,he stumbled and fumbled for words before saying, its because you don't get them prescribed, see how they twist the reality ? They do it all the time, if i am in pain i will take a PK, if i am very anxious, stressed or feel panic coming on i will take a benzo, have i committed a moral sin in doing that ?
If there is more taking them i'd like to know how people actually get them, i think its more scare mongering, as was said above, if 10mg or whatever amount it is, helps someone deal with the world then why is that seen as such a sin?
We are all such sinners then here, meanwhile someone just ordered an drone strike on a wedding in Afghanistan and nobody bats an eye lid.

I have experienced the same thing.  Benzo scripts, at least in my area, started decreasing in numbers back in the mid 2000s regardless if the patient was also seeing a pain doc.  They never 'formally' declared a war on benzos like they have with opioids, but in the main article, IT APPEARS (and I don't believe I'm the only one that is arriving at this conclusion) is that they are now trying to lump benzos into the 'opioid epidemic' and therefore kill their 2 birds with 1 stone, so-to-speak.

I've had a strong feeling for years, aside from the tightening of scripts, that the benzodiazepine class has a lifetime in our society that won't outlive us.  They might keep a few aside for hospital, emergency-type use, but I think the days of going to the doctor for a legitimate anxiety disorder and getting some temporary relief will be gone in the future. 

Sorry to sound so melodramatic, I'm not trying to be.  As they say: expect for the best, prepare for the worst!
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#9
Totally agree Richard, they are lumping benzos esp alps and xanax in with the 'opioid crisis' on both sides of the pond, i know hardly anyone who can get regular prescriptions for pain killers esp if they fall into the opioid catergory.
In fact i only know of 1 person who gets these types of PKs on what is know as a repeat prescription, they get it every month without having to see the gp for 3 months when they do see the gp for a check on how they are coping.

The only way people are getting stuff like xanax is from the dark net, seems a lot of younger folks are getting addicted to the faster acting benzos, how they are treated in the future is pure guess work, but there may be quite a lot who will need help with treatment, possibly in a rehab or detox facility.
At present there are no funding for residential rehabs so there is no real help, it will definatley need addressing in the future though.
We cant just leave all these people to try and wean themselves off, that is not workable for so many who become addicted to those meds.
It really is time that funds were put into help for people instead of wasting so much money on the long lost war on drugs, it was lost long before war was actually declared.
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#10
Using math and basic reasoning there is no monetary benefit to be had by adding fent to xan powder or tabs and selling them. So why do it?!

Whatever the answer to that question is lie sinister intentions.
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