New on the streets: Gabapentin, a drug for nerve pain, and a new target of abuse
ATHENS, Ohio — On April 5, Ciera Smith sat in a car parked on the gravel driveway of the Rural Women’s Recovery Program here with a choice to make: go to jail or enter treatment for her addiction.
Smith, 22, started abusing drugs when she was 18, enticed by the “good time” she and her friends found in smoking marijuana. She later turned to addictive painkillers, then anti-anxiety medications such as Xanax and eventually Suboxone, a narcotic often used to replace opioids when treating addiction.
Before stepping out of the car, she decided she needed one more high before treatment. She reached into her purse and then swallowed a handful of gabapentin pills.
Last December, Ohio’s Board of Pharmacy began reporting sales of gabapentin prescriptions that month, surpassing oxycodone by more than 9 million doses.In February, the Ohio Substance Abuse Monitoring Network misuse across the state.
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