Jump to content
Please Check, and if Necessary, Update Your BB Account Email Address as a Matter of Urgency ×
New Forum: Celebrating 20 Years of Support - Everyone is Invited! ×
  • Please Donate

    Donate with PayPal button

    For nearly 20 years, BenzoBuddies has assisted thousands of people through benzodiazepine withdrawal. Help us reach and support more people in need. More about donations here.

CBC, Mar. 14/17: "Opioid overdose risk rises with use of anti-anxiety drugs..."


Recommended Posts

Posted

This CBC article states, "A study published in the British Medical Journal Tuesday found 30 per cent of fatal opioid overdoses in the U.S. also involved benzodiazepines, a class of drugs used to treat anxiety and sleep problems."

 

Later, it states, "The study found rising use of the painkillers in combination with anti-anxiety drugs in the period from 2001 to 2013."

 

This issue has been in the news before, and in my research on PubMed, I've come across numerous studies that reflect this trend. My concern -- and something that isn't mentioned in the article -- is that both types of medications carry a risk of serious withdrawal symptoms, and should anyone be abruptly cut off from either one of these types of medications, the repercussions could be quite serious.

 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/opioid-benzodiazepine-combination-study-1.4024904

 

 

Posted

Glad to see this on the Ceeb and that they have not shied away from shining a light on the role doctors have played in the opioid crisis and the role benzos are playing in these deaths, as we have known for some time.

 

One of the two articles linked at the bottom of this one you've posted-"Many prescription opioid accicts engage in doctor shopping...", talks about tapering and withdrawal and that withdrawal from opioids can be "extremely troubling" etc.  The young man was cut off.  It would be great to see all of this important information in one CBC article, including benzo w/d.

 

Thank you for this Lapis.  :thumbsup:

Posted
Yes, I know the focus is currently on the opioid crisis, but benzodiazepines really warrant some attention too. I'm not sure what will bring the issue to the fore, and I hope it's not something terrible, but it really IS time that the media blasts the issue wide open.
Posted

My concern -- and something that isn't mentioned in the article -- is that both types of medications carry a risk of serious withdrawal symptoms, and should anyone be abruptly cut off from either one of these types of medications, the repercussions could be quite serious.

 

This is my concern, also, Lapis. Doctors as a whole certainly know how to prescribe these pills, but tapering - NO. If a doctor said something careless like, "Just stop taking it," all hell might break loose. These studies are very important, but without proper knowledge of how to taper off a patient from drugs, there's a lot of risk involved, not to mention polydrugging a patient because the doctor doesn't understand benzo wd or opioid withdrawal. 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • [Fa...]
    • [...]
    • [vo...]
    • [PE...]
    • [Ma...]
    • [Fi...]
    • [de...]
    • [Qu...]
    • [Pe...]
    • [On...]
    • [CT...]
    • [Pr...]
    • [Av...]
    • [Le...]
    • [Ka...]
    • [Bl...]
    • [Ta...]
    • [kn...]
    • [bi...]
    • [...]
    • [Ko...]
    • [Fi...]
    • [hu...]
    • [Gr...]
    • [me...]
×
×
  • Create New...