Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Heath Ledger, Accidental poisoning?

Unless it's your pet Lab that will enthusiastically eat the wall board with a pillow for dessert, no one accidentally takes oxycodone, hydrocodone, diazepam, tempazepam, alprazolam, and doxylamine, all found in the system of Heath Ledger. Heath made choices along the way to anesthetize his brain and emotions.

I had a comment yesterday from someone who read an entry of mine about marijuana. He/she insisted that after using 20 years, it simply had no impact on his mind, and wasn't a gateway drug. Of course, he mentioned that the Iraq War had been running for 8 years, so it had impaired his math ability a bit, because that would mean President Clinton lead us into it--which he did sort of with all the hype about WMD, but that's another blog. He also had forgotten how to use capital letters. How hard can it be to use the shift key?

Most of these deaths aren't happening to star struck actors, they are happening to young white women. Poisoning mortality rates in the U.S. rose 62.5% during the 5-year period 1999 to 2004. 20,950 deaths in 2004 alone, up from 12,186 in 1999. The largest increases were among females (103.%), whites (75.8%), persons living in the southern U.S. (113.6%), and persons aged 15-24 years (113.3%). Among all sex and racial/ethnic groups, the largest increase (136.5%) was among non-Hispanic white females. So what's that include? Overdoses of illegal drugs and legal drugs taken for nonmedical reasons, legal drugs taken in error or at the wrong dose, and poisoning from other substances (alcohol, pesticides or carbon monoxide).

You can't slowly poison your brain cells with alcohol, marijuana or pain meds, and expect it to then indefinitely make the correct decisions on other drugs that become available, maybe because you lied to the doctor or the pharmacist to get a bigger high or low.

3 comments:

Dawn said...

I came over from somebody's blog. I have thought that Heath's death was brought on by his lifestyle.

As for marijuana being a gateway drug, if you'd like more proof than you already have, check out the story my son and I wrote together about his journey through drug addiction and back - on my sidebar.

JAM said...

Heath Ledger's drug cocktail ended up killing him, but several reports I've read of it said that the level of each drug was in a "therapeutic" amount. It was the mix of all the drugs, he didn't take a huge amount of any one drug.

I take a couple of those myself, and when I read about this situation, I sat and thought long and hard about how I take what medicines I do take.

First, I see three doctors. A family doctor, a pain management specialist, and an endocrinologist. I take a current list of each medicine/dose to each doctor visit so that they all three know exactly what and when I take every medicine. I always ask about possible drug interactions.

I do not take any herbal supplements because they can have a drastic effect on prescription medications. I only take a multi-vitamin beside the prescription stuff every day.

I also take the daily meds in a manner where I spread them out over the course of a day, to try to keep from pounding my liver. I have a blood test twice yearly specifically to look for signs of liver problems.

I'm fanatical about what/when/how much I take each medicine.

It's time consuming, but not difficult.

After reading about Heath Ledger, I'm convinced that he had at least two doctors, maybe more, that didn't know what other doctors were prescribing. Then he recklessly took a handful of things, that individually might have only sedated him, but as a mix shut his body down.

I feel he "doctor shopped" so that he could have a bunch of drugs, though I can't prove that.

I guess I'm fortunate in that I don't really have an "addictive" personality. My only addiction is to too much food.

Anonymous said...

Addicts can accidentally overdose on that mixture. Just because it's dangerous doesn't mean he intended to kill himself. It just means that he tried to get one effect and got another.

Second, marijuana isn't good for you but I question the characterization of "gateway drug" If it was then why don't the millions of pot smokers all or mostly start taking cocaine or heroin? You could say that 90% of pot smokers started eating cereal and therefore Cap'n Cruch is a gateway cereal. The social scientist's old saw about correlation not be causation.

On a semi-unrelated note, many anti-drug arguments lose the moral high ground in the face of our ridiculous hypocrisy with regards to alcohol (can be overdosed on, easy to get, more socially acceptable) and pot (can't be overdosed on.)

It should also be noted that countries like the Netherlands with have de-criminalized pot and free needle and safe-haven programs for junkies have lower rates of drugs abuse, overdose and HIV infection.

In drug policy the decision comes down to "do you want to be right or do you want to win?"