AMCC in the News!
Drugfree.org - One-Fourth of Teens Have Misused or Abused Prescription Drugs at Least Once: Study
Read MoreNew Jersey: Attorney General, Division of Consumer Affairs Announce Significant Expansion of “Project Medicine Drop”
Read MoreDrugfree.org: New York Police Department to Use Decoy Pill Bottles to Track Painkiller Thieves
Read MoreDrugfree.org: New York Police Department to Use Decoy Pill Bottles to Track Painkiller Thieves
Read MoreHuffPo: Alicia Clouse, Florida Teen, Opens Up About Prescription Drug Addiction (VIDEO)
Read MoreResidents Across NJ Turn-Out to Dispose of their Unused, Unwanted, Expired Medicine
Read MoreVIDEO: Angelo Valente, CEO of AMCC, discusses the American Medicine Chest Challenge in NJ
Read MoreNY, NYC: 3rd Annual National Event to Raise Awareness of Prescription Drug Abuse Launched
Read MoreNJ - PDFNJ to Lead National Event to Raise Awareness of Prescription Drug Abuse in NJ
Read Morewww.capemaycountyherald.com: Division of Consumer Affairs Will Expand “Project Medicine Drop”
Read MoreNJToday.net: NJ Expands “Project Medicine Drop” Program To Help Residents Safely Dispose Of Unwanted Drugs
Read MoreHolland Twnsp., NJ: Dispose of unwanted, expired medications at drop box at Holland Township Police station
Read MoreDrugfree.org - Prescription Painkillers Containing Hydrocodone May Become More Tightly Regulated
Read MoreBayonne, NJ: Bayonne pharmacy technician charged with stealing prescription pills and selling them to buy marijuana
Read More***MUST READ*** MSNBC.com: How Florida brothers' 'pill mill' operation fueled painkiller abuse epidemic
Read MoreDrugfree.org - Survey: Prescription Painkiller Abuse Often Starts With Free Pills From Friends, Family
Read MoreDrugfree.org: Sharp Increase in Prescription Drug Poisonings Among Teens Reported
Read MoreDrugfree.org: Federal Bill Would Link States’ Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs
Read MoreDrugfree.org - Opana: Newest Prescription Painkiller Being Abused in Rural Areas
Read MorePartnership at Drugfree.org: Five Public Policies That Will Lead to Pain Relief Without Prescription Overdoses
Read MoreThe Partnership at Drugfree.org - Prescribing Opioids After Minor Surgery May Create Dependence in Some Seniors
Read MorePartnership at Drugfree.org - Antipsychotics Increasingly Prescribed for “Off-Label” Conditions
Read MoreNational Online Directory of Permanent Prescription Drug Collection Boxes Launched
Read MoreDrugfree.org - Prescription Drug Abuse Results in One Death Every 19 Minutes in U.S.
Read MoreDrugfree.org: Rise in Prescription Stimulant Abuse Concerns College Administrators
Read MoreDrugfree.org: American Medical Association Calls for Doctor Training to Fight Prescription Drug Abuse
Read MoreCape May Co., NJ: Cape May County Participated in the American Medicine Chest Challenge
Read MoreSalem Co., NJ: Salem County residents turn in old prescription drugs during the American Medicine Chest Challenge
Read MoreAMCC Press Release: New Jersey to Lead Response to Prescription Drug Abuse Epidemic
Read MoreMorris Co., NJ: Morris County Sheriff's Office hosting medication drop-off Saturday
Read MoreCape May Co., NJ: Sheriff Gary Schaffer to Lead National Event to Raise Awareness of Prescription Drug Abuse
Read MoreChatham, NJ: Borough Police to Participate in the American Medicine Chest Challenge
Read MoreYorktown Heights, NY: American Medicine Chest Challenge--Prescription Drug Take Back Day
Read MoreSalem Co., NJ: Collection of old prescription drugs in Salem County to be coordinated by Sheriff's Office
Read MoreAMCC Challenges Families to Prevent the Epidemic of Prescription Drug Abuse in Communities Across the US
Read MoreWI: Coalitions in Action: Wisconsin Tribal Communities Band Together to Reduce Rx Abuse
Read More56 Percent of Massachusetts Parents Say Their Kids Have Access to Prescription Drugs at Home
Read MoreRome, GA: Rome/Floyd County to Participate in the American Medicine Chest Challenge Nov. 12
Read MoreOperation UNITE will host a National Summit on Rx Drug Abuse on Tuesday, April 10, through Thursday, April 12, 2012, at the Walt Disney World Swan Resort in Orlando, Florida.
Read MoreSecond Annual AMCC Calls for Nationwide Awakening to the Dangers of Prescription Drug Abuse
Read MoreJersey City, NJ: 5 busted in N.J. prescription drug trafficking ring sentenced to state prison
Read MorePDFA: Overuse of Prescription Painkillers May Be a Risk Factor for Diverting Medication
Read MorePDFA: Family and Friends Are Main Source of Misused Prescription Opioids, Study Suggests
Read MorePrescription painkillers offer a gateway to cheaper narcotics, gangsters tell SCI
Read MoreNYTimes.com - An Addiction Expert Faces a Formidable Foe - Prescription Drugs...
Read MoreRaritan Twp., NJ: Binge drinking, prescription drug abuse focus of free program June 8 for high school seniors, college students and parents
Read MoreFlorida: Officials Want to Protect Babies of Women Addicted to Prescription Drugs
Read MoreFlorida - “Pill Mill” Bill Passes House and Senate; Governor Plans to Sign Measure
Read MoreOhio - Report: Rise in Opioid Prescriptions May be Leading to Spike in Heroin Use
Read MoreWashington, D.C.: GPhA Pledges Support to National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day
Read MoreColumbus, OH: Ohio Governor Announces $36 Million in Drug Treatment and Work Readiness Funds
Read MoreWesthampton Police Dept, NJ - Prescription Drug Information- Drop Off April 30, 2011
Read MorePalm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw says prescription drug abuse has become law enforcement's top drug problem.
Read MoreSeattle, WA: Harford Co. Prescription Drug Take-Back Day nets 1200 lbs of old drugs
Read MoreBerkeley Heights, NJ: Summit Medical Group collects 250 pounds of unwanted, expired medicines
Read MoreBel Air, MD: Harford County participates in Chest Challenge to keep prescription drugs off the street
Read MoreN.J. offers 100 collection centers to dispose of prescription drugs this weekend
Read MoreAMERICAN MEDICINE CHEST CHALLENGE TO RAISE AWARENESS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG ABUSE
Read MoreAMERICAN MEDICINE CHEST CHALLENGE TO RAISE AWARENESS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG ABUSE
Read MoreFloyd, GA: Dispose of drugs at Nov. 13 pill drop Read more: RN-T.com - Dispose of drugs at Nov 13 pill drop
Read MoreLee County, KY: Lee County to participate in the American Medicine Chest Challenge
Read MoreNew Jersey: Annual N.J. schools report shows drop in violence, rise in prescription abuse
Read MoreLarchmont & Mamaroneck, NY: The American Medicine Chest Challenge: Preventing Medicine Abuse by Children and Teens.
Read MoreKeokuk County, IA: Keokuk County to Participate in The American Medicine Chest Challenge
Read MoreMillburn, NJ: New Jersey’s 21 Sheriffs to Lead National Event to Raise Awareness of Prescription Drug Abuse in New Jersey
Read MoreMadison, South Dakota: AMERICAN MEDICINE CHEST CHALLENGE TO RAISE AWARENESS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG ABUSE
Read MoreMillburn, NJ: American Medicine Chest Challenge to Raise Awareness of Prescription Drug Abuse
Read MoreAmerican Medicine Chest Challenge to Raise Awareness of Prescription Drug Abuse
Read MoreSan Francisco, CA: Officers See More Sick and Elderly Selling Prescription Drugs
Read MoreCDC Survey Finds that 1 in 5 U.S. High School Students Have Abused Prescription Drugs
Read MoreThe Prescription Drug Epidemic: A Federal Judge’s Perspective
The Prescription Drug Epidemic: A Federal Judge’s Perspective
It will come as no surprise to anyone reading this that we have a prescription drug problem in the United States. As I see it, however, we are not devoting our attention to the real root of the problem. Yes, we have prosecuted the drug-dealing doctors, pain clinics and pharmacies. Yes, we have taken on the middle-men (or women) between the doctors and the users. And yes, we have offered help to the addicts. But the real victims are their children, and they have gone overlooked.
I sentence pill peddlers every month. They tell me the same story in nearly every case: Good person gets hurt, gets prescribed pain killers, gets addicted, loses job, and starts dealing to sustain his habit. “A doctor prescribed it so it can’t be bad for you,” they thought. And more often than not, they have kids. Kids who lost their parents to drugs and will now lose them again to jail. With broken homes and terrible role models, they, too, are likely to turn to drugs.
Pills are the new drug of choice for kids. A recent survey revealed that young people 12 and older are abusing prescription drugs at greater rates than cocaine, heroin, hallucinogens, and methamphetamine combined.1 Only marijuana abuse is more common.2 And, most troubling, every day approximately 7,000 young people abuse a prescription narcotic for the first time.3
In turn, young adults are joining the ranks of prison inmates, state and federal. Recently, I sent two young women to the federal penitentiary—ages 22 and 23.
This is the new crack-cocaine epidemic, but worse. Not because it is both rural and urban—crack and other drugs have reached past the cities. Not because it is lethal—many drugs are lethal. It is worse because (1) doctors are the enablers (sometimes knowingly), (2) the supply seems to be endless, and (3) some of our youth falsely believe that prescription narcotics are a safe alternative to other illicit drugs.
And unlike other drugs which kids had to seek out, prescription drugs find them. In a recent survey, 55 percent of 12 to 17 year olds said they obtained prescription drugs from a relative or friend for free; 9 percent paid a friend or relative; and 5 percent took drugs from a friend or relative without asking.4 Less than 5 percent obtained the illicit drugs from a dealer, and approximately 18 percent obtained the prescription from a doctor.5
This problem is insidiously rampant, and law enforcement cannot handle it alone. Indeed, they can arguably only attack a small percentage of those providing our youth with drugs (the dealers and doctors). And while I think stiff sentences for those peddling drugs to our children can help, more action is needed to solve the problem.
Luckily, this is not a problem without a solution. First, every state should have a system like we have here in Kentucky that monitors every prescription. Budgets may be tight, but this is worth the cost. Second, we must educate our children. Studies have shown that talking to our children early and often deters them from using drugs. Third, we must educate adults about the problem: (1) they must act as role models; (2) be involved in their children’s lives, including paying attention to whom their children are spending time with; and (3) make sure they themselves are not the supplier by properly discarding old or unused prescriptions. Children with involved parents have a 50 percent lesser chance of trying and using drugs.6Finally, we must educate doctors about the problem. While most doctors would not illegally prescribe pills, they should still be cognizant of the widespread abuse and exercise special care when prescribing these drugs. And, the few that ultimately choose to become dealers must be prosecuted and sentenced to very lengthy jail times.
1Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration, U.S. Department of Health & Human Servs., Pub. No. 10-4586, Results from the 2009 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: Volume I (2010).
2ibid at 14.
3ibid at 53.
4ibid at 28.
5ibid
6ibid at 72.




