The revised version is designed to be harder to crush and more difficult to dissolve, a method drug abusers use in order to inject or snort it for a euphoric high, according to Dow Jones Newswires.
A report of the new version broke Tuesday evening, right on the heels of a related presentation earlier that day by Jay Jaffee, chemical health coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Health.
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So effective was Purdue Pharma in underplaying the risk of addiction, OxyContin had become a top choice by U.S. drug abusers in 2004. Jaffee said "the number of patients treated for opioid abuse in the state of Maine increased by 460 percent" from 1995 to 2001.
But three years later, an affiliate of the company, Purdue Frederick Company, Inc., had to pay $635 million to settle federal charges for downplaying the drug's abuse potential. Retribution finally occurred, but at what cost?
In 2004, Jaffee said that 495,732 visits to the emergency room were due to pharmaceutical misuse. Residents in the United States more than tripled their spending on prescription painkillers for outpatient use from $4.2 billion in 1996 to $13.2 billion in 2006, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
The makers of OxyContin certainly played a hand in this uptick. Drugs such as marijuana, alcohol and tobacco traditionally get more coverage, but prescription drug abuse is unquestionably on the rise. As it's unlikely abusers will actively educate themselves on their drug of choice, manufacturers clearly have to get more involved in the safety of the product.
JENNIFER JOHNSON can be reached at jenj@wahpetondailynews.com.

8e7d wrote on Sep 27, 2009 2:14 AM: