Written By Kami Ann Davis đšđ
Apparently, you can snort Suboxone and get âhighâ as in impaired and intoxicated. Suboxone IS FDA APPROVED.
While the FDA, deliberately withholds important truths to the public, lying about The Department of Health and Human Services and their positive expressions, regarding Kratom, they are making a KILLING, both money-wise and literally by keeping Americans ADDICTED to this psychologically-gripping medication, called Suboxone/Thebaine/Buprenorphine (derived from the poppy flower and synthesized in a lab, in the late 1960s).
Mind you, this incredible plant I fight for every waking hour almost, day and night (Kratom) is derived from a COFFEE TREE PLANT, the rubiaceae. Look it up. đ
My jaw literally dropped, when I saw this. You rarely ever see an article talk about the underlying issues, that actually drive addiction and behavior. This is something I am constantly talking about, in hopes of helping people in addiction and their loved ones.
I see so many people go in and out of rehab to simply fail, or spin around and around, on that never-ending, merry-go-round.
Let me be clear though, and say part of recovery IS indeed relapsing. Itâs part of the healing process. However, without digging deep into the whyâs and how-comes, the behavior will come back. What I mean by saying this, is to process their mental health issues; as to why the person is behaving this way. Because if you donât, the behavior will likely come back. The behavior which is addiction, caused by symptoms as a result of an underlying condition or mental illness/disorder.
Below are a few articles that discuss the dangers of taking Suboxone and some incredibly surprising facts I did not know. Apparently, people are snorting medications, such as Suboxone.
I would like to highlight the fact that Kratom is a safer option and choice, if youâre seriously wanting to get clean and get therapy. Or if youâre needing pain relief, suffering from fatigue, depression, and anxiety; Kratom is an extremely beneficial tool. Iâve been taking Kratom for over three years and havenât experienced one withdrawal or craving. Iâm not saying itâs inevitable, but if you donât abuse this plant and take low doses, you will more than likely not become addicted to it, or physiologically dependent. HOWEVER, if you have an extremely addictive personality and are abusive in your behavior, and are against therapy, I highly recommend you ask yourself WHY you want or need to take it.
We ARE in a war, currently fighting to keep this plant legal. Why? Itâs CRYSTAL CLEAR, <<<MONEY>>> AND…KRATOM HELPS PEOPLE TO GET HEALTHY. When people are healthy, they need less medication and fewer doctorâs appointments, MEANING the FDA cannot profit off of your illness anymore.
Believe it or not, there are a lot of people who like to go to the doctor and would rather be a little sick to receive whatever kind of attention or medication. This is a mental disorder, in itself, in my opinion. I am not one of these people. I love life and I want to experience all its positives, everything it has to offer in the best, most healthiest way. I do not wish to simply exist, or barely hang on and remain addicted or dependent, on something unsafe. I want to LIVE. Kratom allows me to LIVE again, and be the healthy happy me; the person I was born to be. The person my accident stole from me, Kratom brought back to life.
Below, is is my previous article regarding Suboxone. Also you will find an article explaining the tragedy of a mother who was addicted to substances, who more than likely was trying to get clean.. but maybe didnât know how, or maybe didnât have the right support system surrounding her. I honestly donât know the real truth, but it does say she was taking Suboxone, along with methamphetamines . It had to be one of two things though. Either, Suboxone is incredibly addicting and does make you high, regardless of your reasons for taking it, OR she was seriously trying to become clean, which makes me sad; because her kids lost a life. If only she could of known about Kratom, maybe this story could of had a happier ending. https://sltrib.com/news/2021/01/21/utah-woman-charged-death/
This is the very disturbing article regarding a so-called re-covering addict taking heroin, meth, and Suboxone injections. Unfortunately, she killed her infant.
The reason I wanted to share this particular article is because it talks about how incredibly hard it always was to wake her up, when she was taking her cocktail of antidepressants and injections of Suboxone. Kratom does not give you dangerous side-effects for the majority. If someone is having dangerous effects from Suboxone and antidepressants, doctors should (at least) suggest Kratom, which possibly could of helped this woman, who Iâm guessing was trying to get clean.
Itâs just so incredibly sad and frustrating when I hear these stories. Because, of course this woman is severely ill mentally and emotionally, needs proper psychiatric care, AND the right kind of medication regimen. NONE of what she was receiving, Iâm guessing. https://sltrib.com/news/2021/01/21/utah-woman-charged-death/
https://southeastbeautifulkratom.com/2021/01/05/suboxone-an-opioid-derivative-from-the-poppy-flower/
Written By Kami Ann Davis đšđ
A few more thoughts and studies on Suboxone ~
âIt all started with a slight increase in the recommended dosage. Or maybe it was snorting suboxone strips for recreational purposes by getting it from a friend or a dealer. Whereas you may know about the impending danger of Suboxone addiction, you continue to downplay the possibility of such things happening. Before you know it, you can no longer make do without Suboxone.â
https://knnit.com/alleviating-suboxone-withdrawal-symptoms-hassle-free/
Dangers Of Abusing Suboxone ~
âSuboxone is a prescription medication that is sometimes prescribed to treat pain, though it is more frequently used during the course of opioid addiction treatment. Suboxone helps by alleviating the symptoms that occur when a person stops using opioids. It reduces mental and physical side effects of opioid withdrawal and mitigates the cravings that people experience in their initial days off of opioids.
While Suboxone is by no means a cure for opioid use disorder, it is a powerful tool that outpatient treatment programs can utilize to improve outcomes for individuals who are severely addicted. Suboxone is designed to be difficult to abuse. In fact, it is associated with lower fatality rates than other drugs commonly used in opioid replacement therapy, such as methadone and buprenorphine.
Nonetheless, people who are desperate to get high may be tempted to abuse Suboxone. One common method of abusing Suboxone is snorting the Suboxone medication. Snorting Suboxone is harmful to the addiction recovery process, deeply painful, and associated with a number of life-threatening dangers.â Dangers of Snorting Suboxone | NuView Treatment Center
Common Myths Surrounding the Use of Suboxone to Treat Opioid Addiction
Below is another story and experience of a musician who had trouble with Suboxone ~https://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/17/health/in-demand-in-clinics-and-on-the-street-bupe-can-be-savior-or-menace.html
This is a VERY LONG article, however; I felt the need to post it here in the blog because it exposes so many truths about Suboxone, the money game, and itâs incredibly corrupt players, such as Dr. Andrew Kolodny.
Addiction Treatment With a Dark Side
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⢠Nov. 16, 2013
For Shawn Schneider, a carpenter and rock musician, the descent into addiction began one Wisconsin winter with a fall from a rooftop construction site onto the frozen ground below. As the potent pain pills prescribed for his injuries became his obsessive focus, he lost everything: his band, his job, his wife, his will to live.
Mr. Schneider was staying in his parentsâ basement when he washed down 40 sleeping pills with NyQuil and beer. His father heard him gasping and intervened, a reprieve that led Mr. Schneider into rehab, not his first program, but the one where he discovered buprenorphine, a substitute opioid used to treat opioid addiction.
In the two years since, by taking his âbupeâ twice daily and meeting periodically with the prescribing psychiatrist, Mr. Schneider, 38, has rebounded. He is sober, remarried, employed building houses, half of a new acoustic duo and one of the many addicts who credit buprenorphine, sold mostly in a compound called Suboxone, with saving their lives.
Suboxone did not save Miles Malone, 20; it killed him. In 2010, a friend texted Mr. Malone an invitation to use the drug recreationally â âwe can do the suboxins as soon as I give them to u, iight, dude?â â and he died that night in South Berwick, Me., of buprenorphine poisoning. The friend, Shawn Verrill, was sentenced this summer to 71 months in prison.
âI didnât know you could overdose on Suboxone,â Mr. Verrill said in an interview at a federal prison in Otisville, N.Y. âWe were just a bunch of friends getting high and hanging out, doing what 20-year-olds do. Then we went to sleep, and Miles never woke up.â
Suboxone is the blockbuster drug most people have never heard of. Surpassing well-known medications like Viagra and Adderall, it generated $1.55 billion in United States sales last year, its success fueled by an exploding opioid abuse epidemic and the embrace of federal officials who helped finance its development and promoted it as a safer, less stigmatized alternative to methadone.
But more than a decade after Suboxone went on the market, and with the Affordable Care Act poised to bring many more addicts into treatment, the high hopes have been tempered by a messy reality. Buprenorphine has become both medication and dope: a treatment with considerable successes and also failures, as well as a street and prison drug bedeviling local authorities. It has attracted unscrupulous doctors and caused more health complications and deaths than its advocates acknowledge.
It has also become a lucrative commodity, creating moneymaking opportunities â for manufacturers, doctors, drug dealers and even patients â that have undermined a public health innovation meant for social good. And the drugâs problems have emboldened some insurers to limit coverage of the medication, which cost state Medicaid agencies at least $857 million over a three-year period through 2012, a New York Times survey found.
Intended as a long-term treatment for people addicted to opioids â heroin as well as painkillers â buprenorphine, like methadone, is an opioid itself that can produce euphoria and cause dependency. Its effects are milder, however, and they plateau, making overdoses less likely and less deadly. And unlike methadone, buprenorphine (pronounced byoo-pruh-NOR-feen) is available to addicts by prescription, though only from federally authorized doctors with restricted patient loads.
Partly because of these restrictions, a volatile subculture has arisen, with cash-only buprenorphine clinics feeding a thriving underground market that caters to addicts who buy it to stave off withdrawal or treat themselves because they cannot find or afford a doctor; to recreational users who report a potent, durable buzz; and to inmates who see it as âprison heroinâ and, especially in a new dissolvable filmstrip form, as ideal contraband.
âItâs such a thin strip theyâll put it in the Holy Bible, let it melt and eat a page right out of the good book,â said Ken Mobley, a jailer in Whitley County, Ky., who randomly screened 50 inmates recently and found 21 positive for Suboxone.
Many buprenorphine doctors are addiction experts capable, they say, of treating far more than the federal limit of 100 patients. But because of that limit, an unmet demand for treatment has created a commercial opportunity for prescribers, attracting some with histories of overprescribing the very pain pills that made their patients into addicts.
A relatively high proportion of buprenorphine doctors have troubled records, a Times examination of the federal âbuprenorphine physician locatorâ found. In West Virginia, one hub of the opioid epidemic, the doctors listed are five times as likely to have been disciplined as doctors in general; in Maine, another center, they are 14 times as likely.
Nationally, at least 1,350 of 12,780 buprenorphine doctors have been sanctioned for offenses that include excessive narcotics prescribing, insurance fraud, sexual misconduct and practicing medicine while impaired. Some have been suspended or arrested, leaving patients in the lurch.
Statistics released in the last year show sharp increases in buprenorphine seizures by law enforcement, in reports to poison centers, in emergency room visits for the nonmedical use of the drug and in pediatric hospitalizations for accidental ingestions as small as a lick.
Buprenorphineâs staunchest proponents see these indicators as a byproduct of the drugâs rising circulation and emphasize its safety relative to other opioids.
âThe benefits are high, the risk is low and it is worth it on a population-wide basis,â said Dr. Stuart Gitlow, the president of the American Society of Addiction Medicine.
But Dr. Robert Newman, a leading advocate of methadone treatment, said, âThe safety factor should not be oversold.
âIt is diverted and sold on the black market,â he said. âIt is misused, and it does lead to medically adverse consequences, including death. It is associated with a large number of deaths.â
The addiction drug was a âprimary suspectâ in 420 deaths in the United States reported to the Food and Drug Administration since it reached the market in 2003, according to a Times analysis of federal data.
But buprenorphine is not being monitored systematically enough to gauge the full scope of its misuse, some experts say. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does not track buprenorphine deaths, most medical examiners do not routinely test for it, and neither do most emergency rooms, prisons, jails and drug courts.
âIâve been studying the emergence of potential drug problems in this country for over 30 years,â said Eric Wish, the director of the Center for Substance Abuse Research at the University of Maryland. âThis is the first drug that nobody seems to want to know about as a potential problem.â
The government has a vested interest in its success.
The treatment is the fruit of an extraordinary public-private partnership between a British company and the American government, which financed clinical trials and awarded protection from competition after the drugâs patent expired.
The company, now a consumer goods giant called Reckitt Benckiser, hired several federal officials who had shepherded the drug, and it has financially supported many of the scientists and doctors who are studying it and advocating its use. But over the last few years, the companyâs aggressive campaign to protect its lucrative franchise has alienated some of its customers and allies.
In an 11th-hour bid to thwart generic competition and dominate the market with its patent-protected Suboxone filmstrip, the company sought to convince regulators that the tablet form, which earned it billions of dollars, now presented a deadly risk to children as packaged in pill bottles.
The F.D.A. did not agree. Early this year, it approved generic tablets and asked the Federal Trade Commission to investigate potentially anticompetitive business practices by the company.
Reckitt Benckiser defended its advocacy for the Suboxone filmstrip â now its only pharmaceutical product â saying its research showed that the film was safer than the tablets, kept addicts in treatment longer and had less of a street presence. It added that it was overseeing an F.D.A.-required ârisk evaluation and mitigation strategy to promote the appropriate use of buprenorphine with the goal to minimize the misuse, abuse and multidose unintentional exposure of these products.â
âI was a wreck until I started maintenance therapy in 2003. And Iâve been great since.â – Travis Norton, a recovering heroin addict who cycled through abstinence-based programs with no success before finding Suboxone.Credit…Ben Garvin for The New York Times
Dr. John Mendelson of San Francisco, a consultant for the company, said it could be proud of its management of a difficult product. âTheir biggest success so far,â he said, âis that the whole system has not imploded, that enough doctors have prescribed the drug appropriately that there has been no move to withdraw it from the market.â
Ronni Katz, a health official in Portland, Me., is less impressed.
âI remember the early days when we met with the pharma rep in the area â I donât think he was trying to mislead us â he truly believed it was a miracle drug,â she said. âBut they way underestimated the potential for abuse, which means to me they really donât understand addiction.â
Skeptics and Believers
Nearly a half-century ago, buprenorphine was born in the laboratory of an English company specializing in mustard and shoe polish, where chemists were competing to invent a less addictive painkiller.
âWe were trying to beat morphine, not methadone,â said John W. Lewis, 81, who oversaw the drugâs development.
Though far more potent than morphine, buprenorphine appeared in animal tests to be unusually safe even in very high doses. In 1971, Dr. Lewis and colleagues traveled to an infirmary in Glasgow to conduct the first human tests â on themselves.
Buprenorphine made Dr. Lewis violently ill. âIt quite took the edge off our stay in a splendid hotel on the banks of Loch Lomond,â he said in a speech, and it exposed the painkillerâs âAchillesâ heelâ â âthe rather high incidence of nausea and vomiting.â
In the mid-1970s, Dr. Lewis began shipping the drug to the United States Narcotic Farm in Lexington, Ky., to test its abuse potential on detoxified addicts. A prison that doubled as a treatment hospital, the farm was home to the governmentâs Addiction Research Center (and at times to jazz greats like Chet Baker, Elvin Jones and Sonny Rollins).
With opposition to human research mounting, buprenorphine would be the last drug tested there; government scientists justified the research by arguing that the painkiller also had the potential to treat addiction.
âHereâs the thing: The Lexingtonians were against methadone,â said Nancy Campbell, a historian of drug policy. âThey felt like addicts liked it too much, and it had overdose potential. They never thought abstinence and âJust Say Noâ would work with this population. So they were eager to find an alternative.âImage
Data on disciplinary actions taken against doctors (including reprimand, probation, suspension and license revocation) shows that those authorized to prescribe buprenorphine are more likely to have been disciplined for professional violations than doctors in general.
Credit…Source: New York Times analysis of data from the federal buprenorphine provider listing and state medical boards
The idea of using opioid substitutes to treat opioid dependence is based on the premise that long-term drug use profoundly alters the brain, that the craving, seeking and taking of opioids is a âbio-behavioralâ compulsion. While addiction is considered a chronic, relapsing disease, experts believe that replacing illegal drugs with legal ones, needles with pills or liquids and more dangerous opioids with safer ones reduces the harm to addicts and to society.
Like heroin, buprenorphine attaches to the brainâs opioid receptors, but it does not plug in as completely. It is slower acting and longer lasting, attenuating the rush of sensation and eliminating the plummets afterward. Addicts develop a tolerance to its euphoric effects and describe themselves as normalized by it, their cravings satisfied. It also diminishes the effects of other opioids but, studies have shown, does not entirely block them, even at the highest recommended doses.
A devoted cadre of government scientists saw buprenorphine as a âholy grailâ and over the next few decades âfloated in between the public and private sector for most of their careers,â Dr. Campbell said. The farmâs pharmacist would become an executive vice president of Reckitt Benckiser Pharmaceuticals, for example, and the company would contract with the former National Institute on Drug Abuse director who originally promoted the public-private partnership.
It was a collaboration that the company, whose brand names include Lysol, resisted for a long time, said Charles OâKeeffe, a former White House drug policy official who incorporated Reckitt in the United States.
âThey were grocers,â he said. âFinally, I went to the board and said, âItâs for the social good.â Ultimately, they relented but said, âJust donât spend a lot of money.â â
He did not have to. The federal drug abuse institute financed the two big clinical trials necessary to win F.D.A. approval for $28 million and later spent an additional $52.4 million for studies at its clinical research sites. At least $19 million more in studies are underway.
Further, the F.D.A. granted the company a seven-year monopoly based on its claim that it would never recoup its development costs. (Reckitt now has a market value of $56.7 billion; 21 percent of its operating profits last year came from Suboxone.)
Still, hurdles had to be cleared.
First, Mr. OâKeeffe said, âWe had to change the law because it would have been illegal.â
The Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914, as interpreted, prohibited doctors from prescribing narcotics to narcotics addicts âto maintain their addictions.â In the 1970s, methadone treatment was authorized but limited to clinics where the drug was dispensed, usually daily.
âWith Suboxone, I developed a tolerance within a week. Thereâs zero euphoria.â – Melissa Iverson, who relied on escalating doses of painkillers before having âa psychotic breakâ and ending up on Suboxone.Credit…Leslye Davis/The New York Times
The original advocates of buprenorphine, though, wanted to make addiction treatment mainstream rather than segregate addicts in clinics that became lightning rods for community opposition. They wanted doctors in offices to prescribe it, just like any other take-home medication.
So Mr. OâKeeffe found âinfluential members of Congress interested in doing thisâ: Senators Carl Levin, Democrat of Michigan, and Orrin G. Hatch, Republican of Utah, with support from Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr., Democrat of Delaware. In the end, because of law enforcement concerns, the Drug Addiction Treatment Act of 2000 included unique prescribing restrictions: that doctors seek federal permission, get eight hours of training, accept a 30-patient limit and attest to their ability to make counseling referrals.
The concerns grew from other countriesâ experiences with buprenorphine treatment over the previous decade; successes had been accompanied by abuses. So F.D.A. officials insisted on the addition of an âabuse deterrentâ â naloxone. If addicts crushed and injected the tablets, the naloxone would precipitate excruciating withdrawal symptoms.
The Drug Enforcement Administration was skeptical, saying studies showed that naloxone did not provoke âany evidence of withdrawalâ in âa substantial percentageâ of opiate abusers, and that the amount in the proposed compound would produce only a half-hour of âunpleasantnessâ in those susceptible.
Skeptical, too, were buprenorphineâs original champions at Reckitt, who would have preferred a different additive or more naloxone. âIt was not a perfect solution,â Dr. Lewis said.
Even so, Suboxone â four parts buprenorphine, one part naloxone â was created. And in late 2002, along with Subutex (plain buprenorphine), it was approved by the F.D.A. just as its target audience was about to expand unexpectedly.
An estimated 2.5 million Americans were dependent on or abused opioids last year, mostly painkillers, although heroin dependence has skyrocketed, with the number of addicts doubling over a decade to 467,000, government data indicate. In 2010, the last year studied, 19,154 people died of opioid overdoses.
âHad buprenorphine never been released and all we had was methadone, that number would be much higher,â said Dr. Andrew Kolodny, the president of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing.
Early Successes
In the early days of Suboxone, with Reckitt Benckiser barely marketing its own drug, Dr. Kolodny, then a New York City health official, crisscrossed the city with colleagues to spread the word about the new medication, entice public hospitals to try it with $10,000 rewards and urge doctors to get certified.
Suboxone has begun to lose its market share to generic Subutex, a similiar drug approved in late 2009. A generic version of Suboxone, which was approved this year, and a new brand, Zubsolv, are also expected to cut into Suboxone’s profits.Credit…Source: IMS Health
âWe had New York City staff out there acting like drug reps,â Dr. Kolodny said.
He himself became a prescriber. âAll of a sudden, I started getting calls from white kids on Long Island who were all addicted to pain pills,â he said. âIt was 2003 or 2004, and my first experience of the painkiller epidemic.â
A psychiatrist accustomed to the slow, subtle effects of antidepressants and mood stabilizers, Dr. Kolodny was stunned by patients who arrived âa total messâ and in days seemed âback to normal.â
âIâm thinking, this cures all addictions,â he said.
Dr. Jeffrey T. Junig of Wisconsin experienced a similar revelation. He was concerned that buprenorphine would create âall these dry drunks, people who were no longer using but who hadnât addressed their defects.â Instead, he witnessed something different: âThe process of craving opioids itself causes people to be so one-dimensional that it is a defect itself. Freed from the obsession to use, people change.â
Buprenorphine worked so well on his first patients, middle-aged painkiller addicts, that âthey would have tears rolling down their faces talking about how grateful they were,â he said.
Among them was Shawn Schneider, who had found his way to Dr. Junig after swallowing 400 milligrams of Ambien, thinking, âIf I wake up, I wake up; if I die, I die.â
Like Mr. Schneider, dozens of addicts interviewed portrayed themselves as exhausted and frightened before they started on Suboxone. They acknowledged having âlovedâ their chosen opiate but not what turned into a miserable existence dominated by drug-seeking to avoid âdope sickness.â
Travis Norton, 33, gravitated to heroin in adolescence as a result of a misguided infatuation with artist addicts like William S. Burroughs and Kurt Cobain, he said. For years, he cycled through costly abstinence-based programs, always returning to the needle.
âI was a chronic relapse,â said Mr. Norton, who is now an addiction counselor in a Minneapolis suburb. âI was a wreck until I started maintenance therapy in 2003. And Iâve been great since.â
Mr. Norton switched for a time to methadone when his Suboxone doctor retired. At that point, Suboxone, around $16 for an average daily dose, was considered âthe rich manâs methadone.â Mr. Norton, not rich but a college-educated professional, found the methadone clinic âa ball and a chain.â
âThey call Suboxone âheroin in a pill.â It makes tons of money for the pharmaceutical industry, which has us totally bamboozled.â – Joseph McMahon III, above, whose son, Joseph IV, took Suboxone over nearly three years but still died of a drug overdose in 2011.Credit…Leslye Davis/The New York Times
âI had to travel for my job, and there was zero flexibility,â he said. âThey had thousands of clients, and I was a number.â
Dr. Edwin A. Salsitz of Beth Israel Medical Center in New York, who has been treating addiction for decades, said that in the pre-Suboxone universe, he encountered all too many middle-class addicts who refused to set foot in a clinic.
âAnd then sometimes, a couple of years later, theyâd be H.I.V. positive, or something more catastrophic would have occurred,â he said. âThereâs no way to explain what this meant to the addiction field to have another option besides the clinics.â
Reckitt Benckiser gradually built a stable of doctors paid to advocate use of the treatment, Dr. Salsitz among them.
The recruiting was tough. Those outside the addiction field were reluctant to deal with the hassles of certification, potential visits by the D.E.A. and the addicts themselves. Within the field, buprenorphine faced stiff opposition from the methadone industry as well as traditional rehabilitation programs and the Alcoholics Anonymous movement, which promotes abstinence.
âWith Suboxone, there is a lot of misinformation out there, and the most common is youâve replaced one drug with another,â said Melissa Iverson, a 48-year-old social worker who lives in Florida and is now on disability because of fibromyalgia.
Ms. Iverson first requested anonymity, like most other professionals interviewed, some of whom have never acknowledged their problem to their families, primary care physicians or even insurers. Eventually she decided to âcome out of the closet,â saying, âThe stigma needs to be tackled by real people with real names, or else it will haunt us forever.â
Relying on ever-escalating doses of painkillers to cope with her chronic pain, she had gone âcrazy out of control.â Her life revolved around pills; she would pass out smoking in bed and wake up with burns on her hands or get into car accidents and nod out in the tow truck. Four years ago, she had âa psychotic break,â ended up hospitalized and âcame out on Suboxone.â
In contrast to her painkiller use, she has taken Suboxone at increasingly lower doses, finding that it alleviates her pain without âthose self-destructive behaviors.â
Joseph McMahon IV took Suboxone over nearly three years but still died of a drug overdose in 2011.
âAs an addict, I was high all the time,â she said. âWith Suboxone, I developed a tolerance within a week. Thereâs zero euphoria.â
Successes like hers multiplied until demand outstripped supply because of the limited number of doctors and the patient cap. This brought some unintended consequences.
First, some prescribers pushed patients off the medication prematurely to replace them with new patients because the early treatment phase was more lucrative. Second, patients began sharing the drug, trading it and selling it. Buprenorphine trickled out onto the street.
Health officials, concerned about restricted access, lobbied alongside Reckitt Benckiser for the patient cap to be raised. âWhy should we bind a healerâs hands from helping as many as he or she could?â Senator Hatch said, getting an amendment passed in 2006 that allowed doctors, on request, to go from 30 to 100 patients after a year.
The stage was set for more patients, prescriptions and problems. âItâs when the limit was raised from 30 that doctors started to get commercial about it,â said Dr. Art Van Zee, whose buprenorphine program at a federally funded community health center in rural Virginia is surrounded by for-profit clinics where doctors charge $100 for weekly visits, pulling in, he estimated, about $500,000 a year.
âThey are not savvy about addiction medicine, donât follow patients very closely, donât do urine testing and overprescribe,â he said. âThatâs how buprenorphine became a street drug in our area.â
Troubled Histories
In Fond du Lac, Wis., on the shores of Lake Winnebago, addicts come and go from a bland building housing a medical office, a cheese business and a title company. They bring their tumultuous lives into a tranquil space with hunter green walls, heathered carpet and easy-listening music, presided over by Dr. Junigâs wife, Nancy, candy jar by her side.
Fond du Lac Psychiatry is the kind of setting the original idealists envisioned. They did not foresee the buprenorphine mega-clinics that resemble and frequently double as painkiller pill mills, sometimes with armed guards to protect their cash.
They did not foresee a buprenorphine empire like the one Dr. Thomas E. Radecki, 67, built in northwestern Pennsylvania.
John W. Lewis, who oversaw the development of Suboxone.Credit…Andrew Testa for The New York Times
According to the evidence presented to a grand jury this summer, Dr. Radecki operated four clinics under the business name Doctors and Lawyers for a Drug-Free Youth, serving 1,000 people, many of whom did not need or use buprenorphine and resold it in their neighborhoods. To override the patient limit, he employed other doctors part time. He sold the drug directly to patients, which is legal, and was the countryâs largest individual buyer of buprenorphine in the first half of last year, according to investigators. The previous year, he netted $280,000 in profits from the tablets alone, they said.
In August, the Pennsylvania attorney general announced Dr. Radeckiâs arrest on charges of improper prescribing and trading addiction drugs for sex. His lawyer, John Froese, said Dr. Radecki âdenies that he ever prescribed any medicine that was not helpful to his patientsâ or had sexual relationships with his buprenorphine patients.
Dr. Radecki lost his Illinois license for just such a relationship, and his Pennsylvania license was made probationary in 2007. Nonetheless, the federal government subsequently authorized him to prescribe buprenorphine and then expand his patient load.
âVery few if anyâ doctors are denied permission unless they are âunder investigation or something pops up,â said Rusty Payne, a D.E.A. spokesman.
The Times analyzed the disciplinary records of the doctors on the federal governmentâs online listing of buprenorphine providers, which is not comprehensive because doctors can opt out, and calculated state-by-state disciplinary rates.
In 30 of the 31 states that provided their overall disciplinary rates for comparison, buprenorphine doctors are far more likely to have been sanctioned than doctors over all. In Florida and Kentucky, they are four times as likely to have been sanctioned. In New York, they are six times as likely; in Arizona, seven times; in Minnesota, nine times; and in Louisiana, 10 times.
Rates are even higher for the subset certified to treat the maximum patient load, The Times found in analyzing records from a sampling of states.
In Ohio, nearly 17 percent have disciplinary records, compared with 1.6 percent of all doctors. They include individuals sanctioned for: amphetamine addiction coupled with a Medicaid-fraud conviction; conducting an âexcessive number of invasive proceduresâ; smuggling steroids from Mexico; engaging in conversations regarding a âmurder for hireâ and neglecting to report the rape of a pediatric patient; âdigitally penetratingâ patients and having sexual intercourse with them in the office.
Some were reprimanded or placed on probation before becoming Suboxone doctors; others, stripped of their licenses recently, had their offices shuttered.
The United States Narcotic Farm in Kentucky, where the drugâs abuse potential was tested on addicts.Credit…Kentucky Historical Society
This adds to the volatility of the treatment culture.
A 30-year-old Michigan woman said she was invited into treatment by a doctor who frequented the strip club where she was a bartender and who paid for her medication for several months. When he was placed on probation for âviolation of duty/negligenceâ unrelated to her, she switched to a second doctor, who also got in trouble. After that, the woman bought her buprenorphine on the street for a year â saving $5,500 in medical and counseling fees, she noted â until she found an addiction specialist with an opening.
In some areas, like New York City, there is almost a glut of buprenorphine prescribers. In others, specialists routinely turn away addicts begging for help.
Non-specialists pick up the slack.
Reckitt Benckiser recruited âany doctor willing,â said one former company drug representative who asked not to be identified to protect her career. Those in her territory ranged from âextremely passionateâ to intensely commercial, she said: âOne charged a $50 co-pay, and another $500 for an initial visit. I had a few physicians using the medication themselves. One guy was so enthusiastic I signed him up as a treatment advocate, but then it turned out he relapsed and lost his license.â
Just because doctors have disciplinary histories does not mean that they are unscrupulous. Some of the most knowledgeable, compassionate addiction doctors are former addicts themselves, with medical board actions on their records that sometimes limit their career options.
Dr. Junig, 53, is an anesthesiologist with a doctorate in neurochemistry who retrained as a psychiatrist after his own recovery from addiction. He did not intend to become a buprenorphine doctor.
âTo be honest, I was just trying to build a practice,â he said.
Nor did he intend to become a buprenorphine blogger or the host of an online conversation about the drug through his website Suboxone Forum, which gets 30,000 visits weekly, and a LinkedIn group with nearly 800 professional members. It grew from his initial passion for the treatment â a passion that got him hired briefly as a âtreatment facilitatorâ for Reckitt Benckiser and also got him in trouble.
In 2011, the Wisconsin medical board reprimanded him for using âtele-psychiatryâ to treat five out-of-state addicts he had seen only over Skype.
Over time, Dr. Junig said, he moved âfrom skeptic to true believer to skeptic.â Others similarly modulated their enthusiasm as they gained a nuanced appreciation of the difficulties of managing a complex patient population and a medication that had become a rampant street drug.
Some patients stopped and started their medication so they could still use other opiates or mixed it dangerously with drugs like Xanax. Appointments were missed, prescriptions âlost.â Patients cheated, dropped out and relapsed, sometimes fatally.
âFreed from the obsession to use, people change.â – Dr. Jeffrey T. Junig, on the effects of Suboxone.Credit…Leslye Davis/The New York Times
Joseph McMahon IV, a gregarious, troubled New Yorker, was prescribed a couple of thousand Suboxone pills over nearly three years. Still, he overdosed on other drugs at least five times and at 25 died of one final overdose in December 2011, turning his father, a retired New York City fire lieutenant, into a bereft chronicler of Suboxone abuse.
âMy son swore Suboxone was working for him,â Joseph McMahon III said. âBut if Iâm an alcoholic and you switch my Budweiser for a Bud Lite, sure, Iâm doing great. They call Suboxone âheroin in a pill.â It makes tons of money for the pharmaceutical industry, which has us totally bamboozled, and for these doctors.â
For Dr. Junig, early positive experiences with older patients have been offset by rocky ones with a new generation of heroin and âpoly-drugâ abusers.
Last spring, he prepared to confront a 26-year-old patient who had landed in an emergency room with an arm infected from injecting cocaine. The man had tried to hide his cocaine use by presenting a specimen of âold urineâ to Dr. Junig, who said, âIâm an inch from kicking him out, but I think heâll die if I do.â
The patient, a mechanic with a young daughter, said he had âslipped upâ during a period of homelessness. âIt was just cocaine,â he said. âI donât even really like cocaine. I wanted to tell you so bad, man. But if I lose the Suboxone, Iâll go back to the heroin and the pills, and then Iâll be in real trouble.â
Dr. Junig told the mechanic he would be summoned for surprise testing.
âWhat worries me most are the needles,â the doctor said. âBut people die from cocaine, you know. What you were doing â thereâs a genuine risk. If you get busted for cocaine, you could end up in a situation where social services are involved. People lose their kids.â
An Escalating Problem
In late 2009, a discovery made in a Walgreens in Michigan lit up the forums where recovering addicts chat: âGeneric bupe!â
The F.D.A. had just approved generic Subutex, buprenorphine without the abuse deterrent, despite Reckitt Benckiserâs effort to prevent it. It was, according to that post, about one-third the cost of brand-name Suboxone.
For the previous six years, Reckitt Benckiser, with the governmentâs support, had successfully discouraged Subutex except in special circumstances. Doctors and insurers, told that Suboxone was safer, had favored it.
Ken Mobley, a jailer in Whitley County, Ky., talks about the difficulty of keeping Suboxone out of prisons.
But then Suboxone itself ended up being diverted, misused and abused by injection, indicating that the safeguard was not foolproof, although Reckitt says it stands by it. So when uninsured patients clamored for the cheaper generic, some doctors, including Dr. Kolodny, started accommodating them.
âAt first, I did believe the marketing that there was a booby trap in there,â he said. âBut my impression is that it doesnât work as well as promised as an abuse deterrent.â
The most recent data signal an escalating problem with buprenorphine.
Last year, forensic laboratories identified 10,804 drug seizures as buprenorphine, up eightfold from 2006.
In 2011, emergency room visits for the nonmedical use of buprenorphine were estimated at 21,483, nearly five times what they were in 2006. Also in 2011, poison centers recorded 3,625 cases of toxic buprenorphine exposure, nearly five times as high as the previous year.
More young children were hospitalized because of accidental ingestion of buprenorphine than for any other medication in 2010 and 2011, a federal study found. Another study, financed by Reckitt, of 2,380 buprenorphine overdoses in young children found that 587 had to be hospitalized in intensive care units and that four died.
John Burke, the president of the National Association of Drug Diversion Investigators, said buprenorphine remains âdown on the totem poleâ of worrisome prescription drugs.
âI wouldnât say buprenorphine is not a serious problem; itâs a product for addicts, so the propensity for diversion is probably much higher than with the other prescription drugs,â he said. âBut oxycodone, hydrocodone, Xanax â those make up the bulk of the problem.â
Even so, many local authorities say buprenorphine is their nemesis.
âWhat weâre seeing here in Delta County is really troubling,â said Steven C. Parks, a prosecuting attorney in Michigan. âArrest after arrest of people who are possessing or abusing Suboxone, who donât have a prescription for it, who are shooting it up and who are snorting it.â
âItâs what has followed the oxycodone and the hydrocodone trends here,â he added. âWe donât have heroin yet.â
Dr. Andrew Kolodny, the president of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing, describes the pharmacology of buprenorphine and the drugâs effect at the brainâs receptor level.
Mr. Parks said a big local pharmacy had stopped stocking the medication because its employees felt âvery threatened.â
Pharmacy robberies for Suboxone alone are rare, but they do happen.
In June, Michelle Wilcox, 27, wearing a hooded sweatshirt and surgical gloves, handed a Maine pharmacy technician a note: âGive me all the 8 mg Subs you have. I have a weapon and I will use it.â She walked out with 84 doses of Suboxone â worth about $640 â and drove off in a pickup truck, only to be arrested within hours, according to documents and interviews.
âShe was just desperate,â said Sheriff Scott Nichols of Franklin County, Me. âShe said her own medication had been stolen.â
Ms. Wilcox awaits sentencing after pleading guilty to felony robbery charges in federal court.
In Maine, Ms. Katz, the Portland health official, described a seemingly unstoppable flow of Suboxone onto the streets in recent years, with addicts injecting it. Shawn Verrill, serving time for Miles Maloneâs death from buprenorphine, said he used to sell the drug in York Beach to supplement his income as a lobster deliveryman.
âEvery kid on the beach was looking for it,â he said. âThe high lasts all day.â
Mr. Verrill said he bought cases of âstop signsâ from a pharmacist and charged $10 to $12 for each orange hexagonal Suboxone tablet, earning $4,500 in a good month.
Most buprenorphine advocates interviewed said they believed that deaths were extremely rare. But Suboxone and Subutex were considered the âprimary suspectâ in 690 deaths â 420 in the United States â reported to the F.D.A. from spring 2003 through September.
This pales in comparison with the 2,826 deaths from methadone reported to the F.D.A. over roughly the same period, as calculated by AdverseEvents, a company that analyzes data on drug side effects. C.D.C. data, drawn from death certificates, makes it clear that number is a serious undercount. The C.D.C. does not track buprenorphine deaths, which may also be undercounted.
The F.D.A. information, which is spare, does show that more than half the American buprenorphine deaths involved other substances and that only two of 224 cases specifying âroute of administrationâ indicated injection â the primary concern of regulators.
Fifty deaths are listed as suicides, and 69 involve unintentional overdoses, drug abuse or drug misuse. Thirty were fetal or infant deaths after exposure in the womb.
Over the past two years, Shawn Schneider, 38, has been taking buprenorphine to maintain his sobriety after an addiction to painkillers.
Outside the United States, 118 of the 270 deaths reported were in Sweden. Last year, Swedenâs National Board of Forensic Medicine published an analysis of 100 autopsies where buprenorphine had been detected. In two-thirds, it was the direct cause of death, mostly in combination with other drugs. Swedish researchers attributed the âfatal intoxicationâ to low tolerance because of first-time use or a period of abstinence.
The F.D.A. cautions against assuming that a âprimary suspectâ drug was indeed a cause of death.
But Brian M. Overstreet, the president of AdverseEvents, said, âThe reality is that hundreds of thousands of cases are reported every year by front-line health care providers who purposefully identify a drug as being the primary suspect cause of a specific adverse event.
âWe believe that the link between drug and event,â he continued, âis quite real.â
A Death Lingers
Mr. Maloneâs death remains hauntingly real for his family.
In July, his mother told a federal judge: âI try very hard to forget the last time that I saw him at his wake. He wasnât smiling at me. He didnât hug me. I touched his hand, and he didnât touch me back.â
Mr. Verrill pleaded guilty to the distribution of buprenorphine resulting in death. âI feel guilty,â he said in the recent interview, wearing prison khaki, his arms inked with the saying, âWhat goes around comes around.â
They were friends who had met on the beach.
On the evening of Oct. 12, 2010, Mr. Malone dropped by Mr. Verrillâs garage apartment with a mutual friend. He appeared âhigh but not wasted,â Mr. Verrill said, although a convenience store clerk had called the police saying Mr. Malone had seemed worryingly intoxicated.
All three young men did drugs. Mr. Verrill and the friend snorted Suboxone and swallowed some tranquilizers. Mr. Malone took only Suboxone, two tablets under his tongue, Mr. Verrill said. Then they smoked marijuana, listened to country music and played video games.
Mr. Verrill said he covered Mr. Malone with a blanket when he himself went to bed, thinking he was just sleeping.
Maineâs medical examiner said Mr. Malone died of buprenorphine toxicity. Traces of marijuana, but no alcohol or other drugs, were found in his system; the level of buprenorphine, though, was high for just two pills.Video
Melissa Iverson was transformed after doctors put her on buprenorphine following a psychotic break.
Before being taken into federal custody, Mr. Verrill served time at a county jail on other charges. Suboxone was everywhere, he said, with detainees paying $20 for a quarter-strip that, transformed with water into a crushable pill for snorting, was enough to ârockâ two people whose systems were clean of drugs.
âPeople were beating each other up and taking their commissary food to sell it and buy Suboxone,â he said.
Referring to the federal prison, he added: âThat doesnât happen here. Iâm clean now. If I hadnât been arrested for Milesâs death, Iâd probably be dead myself.â
Competition on the Shelves
Over the years, Reckitt Benckiser started acting more like a pharmaceutical company. It built its Suboxone sales force to about 200; flew members to Italy, Mexico and Spain for motivational meetings; and paid 400 to 500 doctors as advocates, former employees said. It lobbied for influence, the only âcorporate round tableâ member to pay at least $100,000 in dues to the American Society of Addiction Medicine.
After losing its exclusive right to sell buprenorphine in 2009, the company used the drugâs problems to its advantage. Moving aggressively to protect its franchise, it fought the increased prescribing of generic buprenorphine, or Subutex, by telling doctors they would be responsible for worsening diversion and abuse.
âWe had lists of the Subutex writers, and we were actively targeting them,â a former employee said.
Even so, over all, Subutex prescribing increased more than tenfold the first year the generic version was sold. Since it was only a matter of time before generic Suboxone would be developed, too, the company began to argue that the black market and the pediatric poisonings demanded a new formulation.
That formulation was the filmstrip, individually wrapped with a traceable bar code, which the company believed would be patent protected until 2023.
Its release was delayed by F.D.A. concerns that challenged the companyâs rationale for creating it. First, officials predicted âsignificant abuse and diversion,â noting that 6,000 Suboxone filmstrips went missing during clinical trials.
Second, they worried that the film might be more dangerous to children because it could not be easily spit out. The individual wrappers would not help if, once opened, each dose was divided, as is common, the F.D.A. said. It demanded better labeling and a patient-counseling plan.
Dr. Jeffrey T. Junig discusses the questions he asks himself when it comes to discharging patients from addiction treatment programs.
Once the film was approved in 2010, Reckitt Benckiser directed its sales force to discourage the use of the tablet by arguing that its packaging made it hazardous to children â âfear-based messaging,â one former employee called it; âselling against our own medication,â another said.
From that point, the companyâs representatives earned bonuses only for Suboxone film. If they did not reach a target âfilm market-share penetrationâ in their territory, they risked being dismissed, as personnel records in an employment-related lawsuit show.
The company lured patients directly by offering discounts for the film while raising the price of its tablets. It used rebates to persuade public insurers to give preference to the film. At least 15 state Medicaid agencies do; West Virginia even passed a law banning the pills and requiring the film.
In September 2012, Reckitt Benckiser, calling it âa moral obligation,â announced that it would withdraw its Suboxone tablets from the market â in six months â because of âincreasing concerns with pediatric exposure.â It effectively asked the F.D.A. to block generic tablets for the same reason, citing a company-financed study that indicated the film was far safer.
The F.D.A. disagreed and approved generic Suboxone tablets early this year.
Since then, Reckittâs Suboxone journey has become bumpier. It is battling antitrust lawsuits by a dozen drug wholesalers and insurers who say the company âschemedâ to extend its monopoly, overcharging them and, more broadly, the health care system.
In July, Reckitt Benckiserâs stock suffered its biggest one-day loss in two years after CVS Caremark announced that it would drop the film from its preferred drug list in favor of tablets. And there is a new brand on the shelves, too: Zubsolv, which its manufacturer, Orexo, says has âhigher bioavailability, faster dissolve time and smaller tablet size with a new menthol taste.â Orexoâs United States medical director is Dr. Gitlow, the addiction medical society president.
In the third quarter of this year, Reckitt Benckiserâs net revenues from Suboxone declined 14 percent from the same period last year, which the company attributes to its discontinuation of the tablets. The company recently announced that it was âreviewing all optionsâ for its pharmaceutical unit, which includes the possibility that it will sell, bringing its profitable foray into the drug business to a close.
Dr. Robert L. DuPont, the first director of the national drug abuse institute, said he marveled at the cutthroat business competition when âyou couldnât get pharma companies to even think about addiction treatment before this $1.5 billion drug got their attention.â
At a recent meeting of the addiction medicine society, âthe buprenorphine sessions were all packed with doctors who wanted to get in on the gold rush,â he said. âIt seems to me like they are repeating the experience of pain doctors in terms of reckless disregard of the nonmedical use of the drug.â
The system could well be at a turning point, with more drug options, lower prices and expanded insurance coverage under the new health care law and an âaddiction equityâ mandate. In addition, with a recent regulation change, for-profit addiction companies that run methadone clinics are expanding their buprenorphine programs, which have no patient limits, and some state governments are pressing federally funded health centers to increase nonprofit buprenorphine treatment.
For now, though, patients whose lives have been transformed by the medication say they feel stressed by the struggle to get and pay for treatment, the long waiting lists, the doctors who overcharge and the ones whose offices are shut down. The misuse and abuse of the drug make even their own relatives suspicious of them â not to mention the public and private insurers that restrict the dosage and length of treatment, despite studies showing that higher doses improve treatment retention rates and that quitting buprenorphine often leads to relapse.
Betty Jo Cumberledge, a home health aide in West Virginia, said her insurer paid âforeverâ for the potent narcotics she took for back pain. But it cut her off this fall after two years of Suboxone treatment for her resulting addiction. âThatâs just not humanly respectful in my opinion,â she said.
She handwrote an impassioned letter, complaining that she was being âdiscriminated against for seeking treatmentâ and âsaying it would be on them when I ended up relapsing and dead.â She won a six-month reprieve.
âThe whole situation is a big old mess,â she said.
âââ
THE DOUBLE-EDGED DRUG: The first of two articles examining the increasing use â and the successes and failures â of buprenorphine as an addiction treatment. Read the second part.https://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/18/health/at-clinics-tumultuous-lives-and-turbulent-care.html
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Hi had a question…can kratom be used to withdraw from heroin? And if so how and where will I find it? Many thanks
Kind Regards, Michele Simkiss
On Sat, 30 Jan 2021, 03:01 Southeast Beautiful Kratom wrote:
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