Advertisement

New Mexico faces uphill battle with drug abuse

|
Thursday, Sept. 22, 2016 10:45 PM
Jennifer Weiss-Burke, executive director of a youth recovery center in Albuquerque, stands by one of the rooms at the recovery center named after her son, Cameron Weiss. He died of a heroin overdose in 2011.
An undated photo provided by Jennifer Weiss-Burke on Sept. 12, 2016 shows her and her son, Cameron Weiss. Weiss-Burke said his descent into drug addiction started with an opioid prescription a doctor wrote for him for a wrestling injury.
Jennifer Weiss-Burke, executive director of a youth recovery center in Albuquerque, speaks about her son on Aug. 9. His addiction started with a painkiller prescription from his doctor and ended with a fatal heroin overdose nearly three years later.

ALBUQUERQUE – In a state with one of the highest drug overdose rates in the nation, there has been no shortage of campaign donations in New Mexico by the prescription drug industry and allied advocacy groups.

An investigation found drugmakers that produce opioid painkillers and their allies spent more than $880 million nationally on campaign contributions and lobbying over the past decade.

In New Mexico in 2012 alone, opioid makers spent $32,000 lobbying – more than double the year before.

Up for consideration that year was a bill that called for limiting initial prescriptions of opioid painkillers for acute pain to seven days. The measure was ultimately defeated.

Overall, drug companies and their employees contributed nearly $40,000 to New Mexico campaigns in 2012 – roughly 70 percent more than in previous years with no governor’s race on the ballot.

Here are some things to know about political spending and opioid use in New Mexico:

Campaign cash


State and federal candidates in New Mexico received more than $337,000 in contributions between 2006 and 2015 from members of the Pain Care Forum, a coalition of drugmakers and nonprofit groups supported by industry money.

Democrats and Republicans have benefited. At the top of the list are two Democratic members of the state’s congressional delegation: Sen. Martin Heinrich and Rep. Ben Ray Lujan. They received more than $74,000 each from numerous companies associated with the forum.

Organizations included in the analysis also are involved in issues beyond opioids, making it impossible to say how much of their spending was directly related to influencing opioid policies.

Lujan’s office says he hasn’t been lobbied regarding opioids and that the congressman has supported numerous efforts to develop safe prescribing and dispensing programs. Lujan’s district includes a swatch of northern New Mexico that’s home to pervasive heroin use.

Heinrich also has supported legislation aimed at addressing the epidemic. Earlier this year, he convened a discussion in the Española area on how to better address opioid abuse.

Drug deaths


The most recent federal data available shows New Mexico is second only to West Virginia in per-capita deaths primarily due to prescription and illegal opioid drugs. There were 4,340 deaths from overdoses in the state from 2006 through 2014.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has indicated that prescription opioids and heroin account for the majority of drug deaths.

Taking action


New Mexico has been working for years to curb what has now been identified by the highest levels of government as a national epidemic. The state was among the first to require all licensed clinicians to undergo extra training for prescribing painkillers.

One of New Mexico’s strategies calls for expanding access to Naloxone, an overdose antidote. Legislation aimed at doing that was signed this year. They will be launching the Naloxone Initiative by urging more law enforcement agencies to carry the medication and implement protocols for its use.

Advertisement