Limit search to available items
Streaming video

Title Four Corners: OXY - The Hidden Epidemic
Published Australia : ABC, 2010
Online access available from:
Informit EduTV    View Resource Record  

Copies

Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (45 min. 6 sec.) ; 272739067 bytes
Summary This week on Four Corners, Oxy - the Hidden Epidemic - a story that reveals how the misuse of powerful prescription drugs is creating a new generation of addicts.For much of the past three decades, authorities have waged war against the importation and sale of illegal drugs. Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent on law enforcement and drug rehabilitation programs. Now, reporter Matthew Carney reveals that while illegal drugs remain a major problem, many experts believe the widespread use and abuse of legally prescribed opioid-based drugs (known as oxycodone) could create a new and devastating drug epidemic across the suburbs of Australia."It's the hidden heroin. It's the society heroin. You know, to have heroin in a pill." - Drug addictThey are pure, they are legal and they are addictive. The drugs in question are opiate-based painkillers, prescribed by doctors to help chronic pain sufferers. For some time now, authorities have warned these drugs are turning up on the streets and are being bought and sold by addicts to satisfy their drug cravings.But now there's another problem, with profound consequences for ordinary Australians. People who take these drugs for legitimate reasons are becoming addicted. Some have died, others have seen their lives destroyed.Robbie M. was just 20 years old when a forklift crushed his leg in a work accident. He had three operations and was prescribed painkillers by his doctor. Within a short period of time, Robbie became addicted. Just three years after the accident he was dead from an overdose involving prescription drugs. An investigation after his death showed that in the last four weeks of his life he had obtained 2,000 pills to fuel his addiction.Robbie's story might be extreme but it isn't unique.Ruth was a busy working mum. She strained her back at work in 2006. The pain persisted and nothing seemed to help until her doctor prescribed her an opiate-based painkiller. Three years on and Ruth had become a full blown addict. The crunch came when she overdosed.Fortunately, Ruth received help and has been able to get her life back on track. As Four Corners reveals, not everyone is so fortunate.We'll call him Bruce. He is in his 40s but looks much older. He began his abuse of prescription drugs after trying to relieve back pain. He quickly became hooked on oxycodone. To feed his habit he began to 'doctor shop', going from one doctor to another asking for prescriptions of the same drug. Then, realising how easy it was to obtain legal drugs, he began selling them. In no time at all he was leading a team of people who shopped for drugs they could use and sell.At the height of Bruce's addiction, he was even prepared to buy drugs from cancer sufferers. It's cases like his that explain the expansion of the illicit prescription drug market.Over the past decade, the number of prescriptions written for these types of drugs has increased dramatically. Recent figures show doctors wrote 1.8 million scripts for them in just one year.The question is, why are so many more prescriptions being written? In part, the answer can be found in an increased number of chronic pain sufferers. Experts warn that many GP's don't really know how addictive these drugs can be. Now, a growing number of doctors and researchers are warning that unless we learn to treat chronic pain in different ways, that don't involve opiate-based drugs, we will have a major problem on our hands
Notes Closed captioning in English
Event Broadcast 2010-09-27 at 20:30:00
Notes Classification: NC
Subject Analgesics -- Physiological effect.
Drug addiction -- Social aspects.
Drug addicts -- Psychology.
Medication abuse.
Oxycodone abuse.
Australia.
Form Streaming video
Author Arrigo, Ruth, contributor
Carney, Matthew, reporter
Cousins, Michael, contributor
Currie, John, contributor
Friar, Richard, contributor
Friar, Wendy, contributor
Leary, Mark, contributor
Lintzeris, Nicholas, contributor
MacKellar, John, contributor
McMahon, Anna, contributor
Sclavos, Kos, contributor
Sui, Melissa, contributor
Van Egmond, Michelle, contributor