PRESCRIPTION DRUG
ABUSE ISN’T EASY
It isn’t easy to watch the terrible effects of prescription drug abuse. However, too many Montanans watch those they love change; watch families being torn apart; watch them lose everything. YOU can make a difference in preventing abuse and help save our friends, families, and neighbors. Resolve to end prescription drug abuse in Montana.
SIGN THE PLEDGE
Sign the Pledge to end prescription drug abuse in Montana. Following these simple steps gives you the power to help prevent abuse.
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Share this Pledge to encourage others to take these steps!
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HOW TO PREVENT ABUSE
Resolve to practice responsible use of our own medications to set a good example for others.
- Follow all instructions given by the prescriber, and read the material that the pharmacy provides with the medication.
- Only take the exact dose of medication indicated by your doctor, and only take the medication for the issue for which it was prescribed.
- Don’t share your medication with others. Even though they are prescribed by a doctor, prescription drugs are not universally safe for everyone to take. Prescribers factor in a patient’s health history, weight, current condition, and more when writing a prescription. What is a safe dose for one person could prove to be deadly for the next.
Resolve to safely and responsibly store and dispose of your medication.
- Store your medication in a place where only you know to look that is not easily accessible to young children or pets. This will help reduce the chances of an accidental poisoning of your most precious family members.
- When a medication is no longer needed, it is best to get it out of the home. Safely and responsibly dispose of your prescription medications by bringing them to a permanent prescription drop box location or at a prescription drug take-back event in your community.
- A list of permanent drop box locations in Montana can be found here.
- Take your prescription drugs out of their original containers.
- Mix drugs with an undesirable substance, such as cat litter or used coffee grounds.
- Put the mixture into a disposable container with a lid, such as an empty margarine tub or sealable bag.
- Conceal or remove any personal information, including the prescription number, on the empty containers by covering it with black permanent marker or duct tape, or by scratching it off.
- Place the sealed container with the mixture and the empty drug containers in the trash.
RESOLVE TO talk To your loved ones about the dangers of misusing prescription substances.
- There’s a saying, “Your perception is your reality.” Until we start changing our perception of prescription drugs as being ‘not as dangerous’ as other drugs, we will continue to see a reality where too many Montana families are devastated by prescription drug overdoses. The conversation starts in our government agencies, in our doctors’ offices, in our schools, and most importantly, in our homes.
CONVERSATION STARTERS
Resolve to start the conversation about simple ways to prevent prescription drug abuse.
Here are some ideas to get started:
Real life example: you have leftover pain medication from having your wisdom teeth removed, and you later hurt your back from heavy lifting. It is not OK to take the leftover painkillers from your wisdom teeth surgery to ease your back pain. You need to have your new injury evaluated by a doctor who can assess the best way to treat your pain.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that of the 43,982 drug overdose deaths in the United States in 2013, more than half (22,767) were related to prescription drugs.
Teens pick up on family attitudes toward drug abuse and misuse. When students were asked how wrong they thought their parents would feel it would be for them (the students) to use prescription drugs not prescribed to them, 83 percent of Montana 12th graders responded ‘Very Wrong,’ with another 16 percent responding ‘Wrong’ or ‘A little big wrong.’
Source: 2014 Montana Prevention Needs Assessment Student Survey State Report
Parents are one of the most important sources that teens need to hear from about avoiding drugs. Kids who learn a lot about the risks of drugs at home are at least 20 percent less likely to use drugs than those who do not hear that critical message from their parents.
Source: The Partnership Attitude Tracking Study: Teens & Parents 2013
LEARN MORE
What can you do with the drugs you have sitting in your medicine cabinet?
The first step is to keep prescription drugs locked, if possible, and out of the reach of children. Maintain a medications log (PDF) to track the number of pills you have and regularly check that none are missing. Be mindful of guests and strangers who enter your home, and keep medications and bottles out of sight.
Properly dispose of unwanted or unused prescriptions one of two ways:
- Drop your unwanted drugs at a permanent prescription drop box location (listed in the chart below) or participate in a drug take-back event in your community.
- Follow the five easy steps recommended by the Office of National Drug Control Policy below:
- Take your prescription drugs out of their original containers.
- Mix drugs with an undesirable substance, such as cat litter or used coffee grounds.
- Put the mixture into a disposable container with a lid, such as an empty margarine tub or sealable bag.
- Conceal or remove any personal information, including the prescription number, on the empty containers by covering it with black permanent marker or duct tape, or by scratching it off.
- Place the sealed container with the mixture and the empty drug containers in the trash.
The chart below lists the locations of permanent drop boxes across the state. For more information about organizing a take-back event in your community, contact us.
Belgrade: 91 E Central Ave. | Belgrade PD/City Hall | 388-4262 |
Big Timber: 201 W. 1st. Ave. | Sweet Grass County Sheriff’s Office | 932-5143 |
Billings: 220 North 27th St. | Billings PD | 657-8460 |
Billings: 2300 Lake Elmo Drive | MT Fish and Game Office | 247-2940 |
Billings: 2915 Gabel Road | Military Reserve Center | 324-5404 |
Billings: 2910 3rd Avenue N | Crime Prevention Center | 247-8590 |
Billings: 4848 Midland Road | Solid Waste Division | 247-8633 |
Bozeman: 30 North Rouse Avenue | Bozeman Police Department | 582-2234 |
Bozeman: 615 South 16th St. | Bozeman PD/ Gallatin County Sheriff’s Office | 582-2100 |
Butte: 225 Alaska St. | Butte-Silver Bow Law Enforcement Dept. | 497-1125 |
Butte: 400 S. Clark St. | St. James Healthcare Pharmacy | 723-2543 |
Chinook: 420 Ohio St. | Blaine County Sheriff’s Dept. | 357-3260 |
Columbia Falls: 130 6th. St., West | Columbia Falls Police Department | 892-3234 |
Dillon: 2 S. Pacific Dr., #16 | Beaverhead County Sheriff’s Office | 638-3700 |
Eureka: 855 Highway 93 North | North Lincoln County Law Enforcement Center | 297-2121 |
Florence: 5549 Old US HWY 93 | Florence Pharmacy | 273-7979 |
Glasgow: 501 Court Square | Valley County Sheriff’s Office | 228-4333 |
Great Falls: Montana Highway Patrol 812 14th St. N. | MHP District II | 453-1121 |
Hamilton: 223 S. 2nd. St. (City Hall) | Hamilton PD | 363-2100 |
Hamilton: 211 Main St. | Bitterroot Drug | 363-3611 |
Havre: 520 4th | Havre PD | 265-4361 |
Helena: 221 Breckenridge | Helena PD | 457-8830 |
Helena: 2600 Winnie | Geneva Woods Pharmacy – Bergum Drug | 443-2540 |
Kalispell: 200 Conway Drive | The Clinical Pharmacy | 751-7600 |
Kalispell: 920 South Main | Flathead County Sheriff’s Office | 758-5585 |
Laurel: 215 West 1st Street. | Laurel Police Department. | 628-8737 |
Lewistown: 305 W Watson St. | Lewistown PD | 535-1800 |
Libby: 512 California Ave | Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office | 293-4112 |
Livingston: 414 E. Callender | Park County Sheriff’s Office | 222-4101 |
Lolo: 103 Glacier Dr | Lolo Drug | 273-2322 |
Malta: 314 S. 2nd Ave. West | Phillips County Sheriff’s Office | 654-2350 |
Manhattan: 120 W Main St. | Manhattan PD | 284-6630 |
Missoula: 435 Ryman | Missoula PD | 552-6316 |
Missoula: 2230 27th Avenue W | Granite Pharmacy Missoula | 926-2940 |
Missoula: 634 Eddy Ave. | Health Service Pharmacy 2nd Floor of Curry Health Center | 243-5167 |
Plains: 214 E. Railroad | Plains Drug | 826-3552 |
Polson: 5 4th Ave. E | Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes, Tribal Health Dept. | 745-3525 |
St. Ignatius: 35401 Mission Dr. | Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes, Tribal Health Dept. | 745-3525 |
Stevensville: 206 Buck Street | Stevensville Police Department | 777-3011 |
Stevensville: 3804 Eastside Highway | Family Pharmacy | 777-5002 |
Superior: 310 River St. | Mineral County Sheriff’s Office | 822-3555 |
Townsend: 519 Broadway | Broadwater County Sheriff’s Office | 266-3441 |
Troy: 301 E. Kootenai Avenue | Troy Area Dispatch | 295-4111 |
White Sulphur Springs: 101 W. Crawford | Meagher County Sheriff’s Office | 547-3397 |
West Yellowstone: 124 Yellowstone Ave. | West Yellowstone PD | 646-7600 |
Whitefish: 275 Flathead Ave. | Whitefish Police Department | 863-2420 |
Whitefish: 6475 Hwy 93 S | Alpine Apothecary | 862-7434 |
Programs
- DPHHS Network of Care for Behavioral Health
- National Suicide Prevention Lifeline or 1-800-273-TALK (free, confidential, 24/7)
- Narcotics Anonymous
- National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence
- Rocky Mountain Poison Center for emergencies: 1-800-222-1222
- SAMHSA Substance Abuse Treatment Facility Locator
- SAMHSA Treatment Referral Line: 1-800-662-HELP (toll-free, all calls are confidential)
- State Approved Chemical Dependency Treatment Programs (PDF)
Resources
These statistics bring to light what’s going on in Montana:
Across the country, 80 percent of “recent heroin initiates had previously used prescription opioids non-medically.” source
Nearly 70 percent of prescription painkiller abusers get their drugs from a friend or family member, and most get them for free. source
From 2011-2013 prescription drug overdoses (where no substances other than Rx drugs were present) were responsible for at least 369 deaths and more than 7,200 hospital inpatient admissions and emergency department encounters in Montana. source
While many parents (34 percent) believe there is little they can do to prevent their kids from trying drugs other than alcohol, parents are actually one of the most important sources that teens need to hear from about avoiding drugs. In fact, kids who learn a lot about the risks of drugs at home are at least 20 percent less likely to use drugs than those who do not hear that critical message from their parents. source
Survival is powerful.
Please read these survivor stories. Share your own by emailing Kaelyn Kelly, Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention Coordinator, Montana Attorney General’s Office, Department of Justice. Stories will appear on this site after they have been edited to remove any identifying details of the individuals described.
Then came the most frightening night of my life. On October 23, 2006, I went to my sister’s house. The doors were wide open, heat blazing, toilet overflowing, and syringes filled with blood on coffee tables, in the sink, in the refrigerator. My heart almost stopped as I saw my sister – arms rolling like windmills, tongue cracked like a desert, delirious, and naked. I got her semi-dressed and stuffed her in my car.
My mind was in total chaos. We rushed to the ER. That night they tested her for spinal meningitis. A few days later, my sister was diagnosed with brain and liver abscesses from IV drug use. She could not communicate, nor could she even complete the basic functions of life. She spent about a month in the hospital, and then she was transferred to a nursing home.
But she had not hit bottom. Within a few weeks of leaving the nursing home, my sister returned to active use of opiates. I was out of my mind. This was one of the most difficult parts – to realize that nothing in the world will save her and that I was powerless to help her anymore. Every time I went to her house, there would be bent spoons in the sink, little pieces of cotton in the ashtray and drops of blood on her hands and wrists.
Finally, miraculously, one day she reached true bottom.
She decided to be done. I will never forget that morning. She was sitting at the kitchen table, had just done a shot, owed people money, and was wondering what to pawn. Amid many tears, she made a decision to stop. That day was a true miracle.
This is a true account of my sister’s near death experience. May her story touch many hearts and inspire other lives.
It killed him.
Lois’s son had already beaten prescription drug abuse once when he was diagnosed with cancer in his early 30s. “As a result of the cancer,” Lois said, “he hit the pill lottery.”
Doctors prescribed him OxyContin, hydrocodone and others, Lois said. Eventually, he was put on methadone, a synthetic opioid often used to treat patients “de-toxing” from drugs like heroin. Lois said she’s not entirely sure why her son was on methadone. Certainly, it was less expensive than the other pain-relievers he had been taking.
By the time her son’s cancer went into remission, Lois’s son had fallen back into drug addiction. She said he was on methadone for several months before his death. He turned 32 four days before he died in the spring of 2007. Just days before, his doctor had written him a prescription for 90 more methadone pills.
But he wanted to get off the drug.
“The last conversation I ever had with him, he was talking about getting off methadone,” she said. “He was planning his life, he was buying a house. He believed he had the world by the tail and he didn’t live to see it.”
The young man died with his friend, who had also taken methadone.
“He left behind a son who will never get to have his daddy hug him and say ‘I love you,’ a broken-hearted mother, two brothers and a sister whose lives will never be the same without their big brother,” Lois said. “He believed he would live to enjoy a drug-free life, but was outsmarted by the predator.”
I have watched two people I love battle this horrible addiction and many other friends and family members abuse prescription drugs. It is definitely something that deserves more attention.
The wedding was over and we had done a whole lot of visiting and very little drinking. We were hungry. Little did we know that Roundup had not even so much as a gas station open, so we opted to go ahead and go home.
I called my son to check in and let him know we would be coming home. Jimmy sounded a bit sleepy, but it was 3 a.m., after all.
Dread overtook me as I was speaking to him. Oh my God! His children’s mother was there with him! I could hear her talking in the background. She was not to be at the house. What was she doing there? Was my son using again? Why was she there! These thought raged in my head, but I very calmly asked Jimmy “Why is Mary there?”
“Please Mom, don’t be mad,” he said. “She didn’t have anywhere to go and she wanted to see the kids.” I was torn because I loved this girl as my own, but I also knew she was still out there, still using and I was scared as hell that my son was using, too.
I felt the most overwhelming dread. It was like someone was stepping right in the middle of my chest and slugging me in the gut at the same time. I felt physically ill. My husband and sister tried to console me, but the crushing feeling would not lift.
We pulled into the drive way, and I went to the door with a mixture of dread and anticipation. Dread because I knew my fears could very well be realized. Anticipation because I wanted badly to be reassured that my fears were unfounded. I walked in to the house and walked straight to my bedroom. I was startled by the fact that my daughter-in-law was in my room on her hands and knees, looking for something on the floor. I calmly asked her what she was doing and she raised her big brown eyes up to me and said “Huh?”
I knew at that instant she was high as a kite on prescription medications. I had been down this road so many times in the past 10 years with my son that I knew the nodded, dreamy look. I knew the irrationality of crawling across the floor because you couldn’t walk. I had seen it so many times. I felt a mixture of pity and revulsion. I loved this girl, but what was the answer with her?
I was so tired. All I wanted was my bed and a good rest before facing tomorrow and dealing with the task of asking Mary to leave our house. Tough love is exactly that — it’s tough. It never crossed my mind to go to Jimmy’s bedroom to check on him. After all, he had his addiction whipped. My son was okay, now.
The next thing I was conscious of was someone beating on my door and screaming hysterically. I bolted from my bed, my husband right behind me. I jerked our door open with such force that I tore a hinge off completely. My daughter-in-law was standing at the door screaming, “He’s dead! I think he’s dead!”
I am feeling a bit nauseous at this point in my writing and the words are not coming so easily now. The site that greeted me is forever etched in my mind. There at the counter in the kitchen sat my beloved son, chin resting on the counter. I have never seen a dead person before and yet, somehow, I knew. He was gone.
My baby, my only son, my rock was gone. My husband called 911. They tried to help, but deep in the recesses of my broken heart I knew my son was gone. Events from here on out are sketchy. I remember the horror of that plastic backed paper sheet covering my son. I remember the horrified screams. I know not if they were coming from me, or my daughter-in-law or Jimmy’s little girl. The chaos was unbelievable, the pain unbearable, the questions unending. I didn’t give a fig what funeral home was to pick up the body. My God, that was my son. This process took about two hours while my son lay cold and lifeless on the floor. Autopsy? Go ahead, but I knew what he died from. Prescription drug overdose. I didn’t need anyone to tell me that. I needed someone to tell me why I couldn’t save him.
The next few days flew by in a blur of numbness and pain. For about three weeks, all I really wanted to do was sleep and cry. I was actually mad because I was alive. I wanted to die. Gradually, I pulled myself out of bed and went to fall semester. I passed my classes but remember little. I cried at the drop of a hat. I hated myself and everyone around me.
Today, almost eight months later, I still cry a lot. I’m crying now and I reckon I’ll probably cry until the day I die. There is no pain like losing a child. I am forever altered in my life. I am not the same person anymore.
Parents, be aware of what’s in your medicine chest. Teens are getting high all the time on their parents left over medications. Those who take medications such as opiates that the doctor prescribes for you, be careful. Thank you for taking time to read this. I know I’m not a writer but, this somehow has helped me along my journey.
CONTACT US
Kaelyn Kelly
Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention Coordinator
Montana Attorney General’s Office, Department of Justice
PO Box 200151, Helena, MT 59620-0151
(406) 444-2649
kkelly@mt.gov