|
Updated: 9:17 AM Jun 30, 2009
FDLE and Florida Medical Examiner Release Drug Report
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement, FDLE, released the Florida Medical Examiners Commission Report on Drugs Identified in Deceased Persons.
Posted: 9:17 AM Jun 30, 2009Reporter: FDLE |
|
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement, FDLE, released the Florida Medical Examiners Commission Report on Drugs Identified in Deceased Persons.
The report contains information compiled from autopsies performed by medical examiners across the state in 2008. During that period, there were approximately 171,800 deaths in Florida. Of those, 8,556 individuals were found to have died with one or more of the drugs specified in this report in their bodies.
The report indicates the most frequently occurring drugs found in decedents were Ethyl Alcohol (4,070), all Benzodiazepines (3,229), Cocaine (1,791) and Oxycodone (1,574). The drugs that caused the most deaths were Oxycodone, all Benzodiazepines (with Alprazolam, also known as Xanax, accounting for the majority of the deaths), Methadone, Cocaine, Ethyl Alcohol, Morphine and Hydrocodone.
The three drugs that were the most lethal, meaning more than 50 percent of the deaths were caused by the drug when the drug was found, were Heroin (90.2 percent), Methadone (74 percent), and Oxycodone (59.8 percent). Occurrences of Heroin increased by 20 percent and deaths caused by Heroin increased by 28 percent when compared to 2007.
Deaths caused by Cocaine declined by 23.1 percent and deaths caused by Methadone declined by 11.7 percent when compared with 2007. In addition, deaths caused by Methylated Amphetamines, Carisoprodol, Fentanyl, and Propoxyphene declined in this report.
Oxycodone and Alprazolam became more prevalent in 2008, with occurrences increasing by 25.6 percent and 29.4 percent respectively. Deaths caused by Oxycodone also increased by 33.5 percent and deaths caused by Alprazolam increased by 23.3 percent compared to 2007.
The report also indicates that prescription drugs continued to be found more often than illicit drugs both as a causal factor and merely present in the decedent. Prescription drugs account for 75 percent of all drug occurrences in this report when Ethyl Alcohol is excluded.
“The 2008 report reflects the threat and danger of prescription drug abuse,” said FDLE Commissioner Gerald Bailey. “Florida law enforcement is working aggressively to intercept those who traffic in prescription narcotics.”
"The magnitude and severity of prescription drug abuse calls for strong, coordinated action,” said Director of the Office of Drug Control Bill Janes. “Governor Charlie Crist has signed legislation that will improve standards of care, implement a prescription drug monitoring program, regulate pain clinics, and help prevent doctor shopping. As part of a comprehensive strategy to reduce drug-related deaths, this legislation represents a critical step toward reducing prescription drug abuse and diversion."
Medical Examiners specifically collected information on the following drugs: Ethyl Alcohol, Amphetamines, Methamphetamines, MDMA (Ecstasy), MDA, MDEA, Alprazolam, Diazepam, Flunitrazepam (Rohypnol), other Benzodiazepines, Cannabinoids (Marijuana), Carisoprodol/Meprobamate, Cocaine, GHB, Inhalants, Ketamine, Fentanyl, Heroin, Hydrocodone, Hydromorphone, Meperidine, Methadone, Morphine, Oxycodone, Propoxyphene, Tramadol, and Phencyclidine (PCP).
The Florida Medical Examiners Commission 2008 Report of Drugs Identified in Deceased Persons is available on the FDLE Web site below.
Latest Comments
So, a lot of stupid people are dying from a few specific drugs. Good. Cull out the stupid ones.
These numbers are a small portion of a nation wide epidemic that is so far out of control is has become a nightmare for so many families. Drugs like Methadone can kill with one pill and has flooded our streets in popularity. Doctors are not being held accountable for the massive distribution of these drugs. They basically have a license to deal in legal narcotics, many times linked to diversion and deaths. These numbers only include those that had an autopsy, most with pre existing illnesses may have died from these drugs but where never evaluated assuming it was other health issues. Methadone, OxyContin, Fentynal and others are taking lives at a rapid pace. Our FDA and SAMHSA ignore these death tolls in favor of the frug companies and the politicians are blinded by the benefits of the lobbyist. A human life has lost it's value in this country when it comes to drug companies and doctors. Mothers Against Medical Abuse. Org
And the number of deaths attributable to cannabis toxicity:? ZERO. Still.
- Over 20 Arrested, Thousands of Pounds of Pot Seized Here
- Tyndall Agency Develops Rapid Intervention Fire Vehicle
- Panama City Police Arrest Nine in Prostitution-Sting
- Odd Clouds Over Panama City
- Lawsuit Claims Bay County School District Withholding Evidence
- Suspect Dies after Attempt to Swallow Bag of Pot, FDLE Investigates
- Overnight Gulf County Crash Leaves Woman Dead
- Flames Rising High From Controlled Burn on Shell Island
- Teen Murdered, Two arrested
- Woman Blames Big Breasts for Declining DUI Breathalyzer Test
- Junk Food Stamps
14 Comments - Casinos in Florida - It's a Dead Issue This Year
11 Comments - Bay Haven Addresses Concerns over Its Racial Demographics
11 Comments - Over 20 Arrested, Thousands of Pounds of Pot Seized Here
4 Comments - Woman Questioned on Run for Beach City Council
3 Comments - Bay Medical Center is One Step Closer to Becoming Privatized
3 Comments
- Skyscraper runners take workouts to incredible heights
Sprinting up 86 flights of stairs of the Empire State Building -- even if it's for a worthy cause -- is not everyone's idea of a good time. Especially when there's an elevator nearby. But tonight, more than 650 participants will take the long way up one of New York's most iconic landmarks at this year's Empire State Building Run-Up. - Heartburn drugs linked to serious infections
FDA warns that people taking drugs that suppress stomach acid production may be at an increased risk for intestinal bacteria infections. - Teen pregnancy, abortion rates at record low
Birth and abortion rates among U.S. teens fell to record lows in 2008 as increased use of contraceptives sent the overall teen pregnancy rate to its lowest level since at least 1972, a study showed on Wednesday. - Americans significantly lower trans fat over decade
Study finds that Americancs have experienced a decline in their blood levels of trans fat, which could mean a decreased risk of heart disease. - Inhalable caffeine a cheap buzz, but may have risks
Move over, coffee and Red Bull. A Harvard professor thinks the next big thing will be people inhaling their caffeine from a lipstick-sized tube. Critics say the novel product is not without its risks. - Komen charity under scurtiny for funding, science
The Susan G. Komen for the Cure charity defines its mission as finding a cure for breast cancer. In recent years, however, it has cut by nearly half the proportion of fund-raising dollars it spends on grants to scientists working to understand the causes and develop effective new treatments for the disease. - Paternity questions plague 1 in 10, firm says
The company that made its name peddling drugstore paternity tests to uncertain parents now says that more than 1 in 10 adults in the U.S. has had reason to ask the question: Who’s your Daddy? Gary Garner finally confirmed he's the real father of Skyler, 14. - Salt overload: Nearly all U.S. adults consume too much
Despite public health messages telling Americans to lower the amount of salt in their diets, 90 percent of people in the U.S. older than age 2 consume more than the recommended amount of sodium each day, a new report says. - Komen's Karen Handel quits after funding dispute
Karen Handel, an executive with the Susan G. Komen for the Cure breast-cancer charity has resigned after a dispute over funding for Planned Parenthood. - Have we met? Face blindness prevents recognition
Some people are better at recognizing a face. Now a study of individuals who have prosopagnosia, a disorder rendering them unable to distinguish another's mug, suggests a possible cause: a breakdown in a brain pathway used to process faces.
- Warm winter concerns Midwest farmers
Illinois is basking in its sixth warmest winter in 117 years -- good news for residents who have not had to shovel snow but a red flag for some of the state's most productive businesses: farms. - Freezing conditions paralyze Danube River shipping
At least four Balkan nations suspended shipping on the Danube River because of severe frost and the vast amount of ice blocking the heavily traveled waterway. - Ice not thick enough for Dutch skating marathon
Organizers in the Netherlands say it is still too early to decide if a 125-mile (200-kilometer) skating marathon across frozen waterways can be staged for the first time in 15 years. - January warmest on record? The answer is...
Hard as it may be to believe if you live in the Northeast or upper Midwest, last January was not the warmest on record across the lower 48 states, federal recordkeepers announced Tuesday. - Deadly floods follow in iced-over Europe
Much of Europe is still covered in snow and ice, but some areas are already seeing deadly flooding amid concerns that it will get worse before it gets better. - Arctic wave saves Czech ice wine production
In a vineyard in Moravia, the Arctic chill striking Europe at least has some people jumping with joy. - What winter? That's question for most of US
Snow has been missing in action for much of the U.S. the last couple months. But it's not just snow. It's practically the season that's gone AWOL.
- NYT: Report finds early Afghanistan missteps
A new unpublished history of the Afghanistan war details hows American forces, hamstrung by inadequate resources, missed opportunities to stabilize Afghanistan during the early years of the conflict.
- Cold-case trial: Did wife, pals kill Marine?
Thirty-seven years later, three people face trial on murder charges for what prosecutors say was an ambush triggered by a love triangle around a woman and three Marine buddies.
- ‘Dangerous base’ sours U.S.-Japan ties
A U.S. base on Okinawa is the focus of a deepening dispute that is testing Japan's security alliance with the United States and dividing its new government in Tokyo.
- Sailor hurt in USS Cole bombing dies
A survivor of the suicide bombing on the USS Cole in Yemen 10 years ago has died at his Florida home.
- Marines tell of battles in Afghan province
Watch an interactive video of three Marines on patrol in Afghanistan as they battle Taliban forces.
- Family pleads for release of U.S. soldier
The family of a U.S. soldier captured in eastern Afghanistan pleads for his release after the Taliban releases a video showing the airborne infantryman, who has been held more than five months.
- Powell social worker's frantic 911 calls released
Emergency calls placed in the minutes after Josh Powell killed his two young sons were released Tuesday, including one from the "traumatized" social worker outside the house. - Guard kills gunman at NY courthouse
A gunman opened fire on a Middletown, N.Y., courthouse Wednesday, wounding one court officer before he was shot and killed himself, reported NBCNewYork.com. - Teen gets life for strangling, stabbing girl, 9
A teenager who confessed to strangling, cutting and stabbing a 9-year-old neighbor because she wanted to know how it felt to kill someone was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison with the possibility of parole. - Umm, are those gang signs in Chicago's new sticker?
- Driver's taunt before crash: 'Get ready to die'
The sole survivor of a fiery, head-on collision says his friend taunted his passengers and seemingly had a death wish in the moments before the crash. - Parents fume over accused LA teachers' pensions
The abuse scandal in the Los Angeles Unified School District has angered many parents and left students heartbroken. - Calif. 'poster couple' for gay rights is divorcing
When gay couples first sought the right to legally wed in California, it was only a matter of time before that benefit extended to the right to split up. - Man tries to burn wife, scorches himself instead
Authorities say a man is in critical condition Tuesday after he tried to set his wife on fire, but burned himself instead. - That'll be $2,000 extra for your aisle seat, Mr. Nader
- Aide allegedly sent love letters at troubled school
Officials at an elementary school rocked by teacher sex abuse claims are investigating yet another allegation, this one involving a teacher's aide accused of sending love letters to an 11-year-old boy.
- Honda frets over Civic mileage verdict
Honda is bracing for a possible flood of lawsuits if it loses an appeal of a recent small claims court decision that ruled the Civic Hybrid's mileage didn't live up to promises. - Stocks lower as Greece talks drag on
Stocks gave up early gains on Wednesday as the Dow hovered at its highest level in nearly four years and investors waited for Greece to accept tough reforms in exchange for a bailout. - Online dating: the science of love at first byte
Online dating sites advertise groundbreaking technology and sophisticated formulas and state-of-the-art programming to help you find your true soul mate. But does it work? - Tax questions? There's an app for that
It seems there’s an app for everything these days, including checking the status of your income tax refund. - Jobless want you to quit already!
Even though some employees are frustrated with their jobs because the tough economy has led to furloughs, wage freezes, and benefit cuts, many aren’t upset enough to say, “I quit!” - Cheapism: Chocolates for lovers on a budget
Lovebirds spend an average of $100 on gifts for their Valentine. Here's a way to make sure your sweetie gets some tasty sweets without breaking the bank. - Players' clubs: The homes of the Grammy nominees
The hottest acts in the music business earn their pay by living in the recording studio or on the road. But even pop stars need a place to call home every once and awhile. Here are some of theirs. - Nello Ferrara, creator of Red Hots, dead at 93
Nello Ferrara, the man who led the company that invented those confectionery classics and others (Lemonheads, Boston Baked Beans, Atomic Fireballs), has died. - The good and bad about working from home
Those who work well at home are those who can do it all and then some, and not be distracted by the TV, the refrigerator or a warm summer's day. - Why Amazon Prime is the wave of retail's future
Amazon Prime is the new disruptive force that will once again redefine consumers' shopping expectations much as the Sears catalog did more than 100 years ago.
- A rejection for Romney
First Read: Santorum’s three-state victory Tuesday put Romney’s on-again, off-again frontrunner status back on center stage. - 2nd wind for Santorum after wins in Minn., Mo., Colo.
Rick Santorum swept three nominating contests held Tuesday evening, upsetting frontrunner Mitt Romney and injecting new energy into the former Pennsylvania senator's campaign. - House GOP introduces its insider trading bill
House Republicans have introduced their version of a bill to ban insider trading by thousands of federal officials, and have added provisions to bar lawmakers convicted of a felony from collecting their government pensions. - Make or break time for Santorum
First Read: Contests in Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri offer the former Pennsylvania senator an opportunity break through once more. - Some Dems seeking reversal on contraception decision
Some congressional Democrats were working behind the scenes Tuesday to persuade Obama to reverse course; some warned of a potential threat to the president’s re-election chances in states with large Catholic populations. - It's Fallon vs. FLOTUS in a fitness face-off
Jimmy Fallon perhaps unwisely took on Michelle Obama at the White House in several exercise competitions, while Jimmy Kimmel pointed out Mitt Romney's loose approach to facts. - First Read: A 'Super' reversal
Anyone who is surprised by the Obama campaign's announcement last night that it's encouraging Democratic donors to give money to the pro-Obama Super PAC wasn't paying attention in 2008. - Group wants criminal investigation of Super PACs
First Read: A top campaign watchdog group is calling for a Justice Department criminal investigation into Super PACs supporting President Obama and GOP front runner Mitt Romney. - Messy caucuses in Nevada, Iowa raise questions
After back-to-back fiascos in Nevada and Iowa, the term "caucus" may be on its way to becoming a bad word in the GOP lexicon. - Texas primary date in doubt after deal talks stall
Texas is all but certain to have an even later say in choosing the Republican presidential nominee after what at first looked like a breakthrough deal over redistricting maps ended with wide rejection of the proposal.
- Mood of 'despair' as Syria bombs city for 5th day
Syrian government forces have deployed tanks in the streets and are bombing indiscriminately in the city of Homs, according to a BBC correspondent on the scene. - Syria militia 'slaughtered' 3 families, group says
Bombardment of the Syrian city of Homs by government forces killed at least 47 civilians in the first eight hours of Wednesday, activists in the city and opposition sources said. - Report: Iran says it could hit US forces anywhere
Iran is capable of hitting U.S. military forces anywhere in the world if attacked by the United States, the Iranian ambassador to Moscow reportedly said Wednesday. - Europe's big freeze: Danube shipping paralyzed
Bulgaria and Romania are suspending all shipping on the Danube River due to the vast amount of ice blocking the waterway amid Europe's widespread big freeze. - Greece's economic crisis is making people ill (literally)
Greece's economic crisis is taking its toll on people - hospital admissions are up 25%, suicides are up 40% and violent crimes, including murder, are up almost 100%. NBC's Keith Miller reports from Athens. - Protests in paradise as riots follow coup in Maldives
Supporters of the Maldives' former president rioted Wednesday as the country's new leader appealed for an end to the political turmoil in this Indian Ocean nation. - Russian scientists reach lake under Antarctica
After more than two decades of drilling in Antarctica, Russian scientists have reached the surface of a gigantic freshwater lake hidden under miles of ice for some 20 million years — a lake that may hold life from the distant past and clues to the search for life on other planets. - Top China cop seeks asylum in US consulate?
A prominent Chinese official who might have been the country's highest-profile policeman has dropped from sight amid unconfirmed reports of a scandal and a bid for U.S. asylum. - Cracks inside wings? Checks ordered on every A380
BERLIN -- Europe's aviation watchdog called for checks Wednesday on the entire worldwide fleet of Airbus A380 superjumbo jets for cracks on parts inside the wings. - Car bomb attack in Somali capital kills 8
A car bomb killed eight people and wounded two members of parliament in Somalia's capital Wednesday, officials said, in an attack claimed by a spokesman for Somalia's Islamist insurgency.
- Calif. mine owner told he's operating illegally
California's Gold Rush was more than a century-and-a-half ago, but its Wild West spirit lives on in a dispute between government agencies and a landowner in the Sierra Nevada foothills.
- January warmest on record? The answer is...
Hard as it may be to believe if you live in the Northeast or upper Midwest, last January was not the warmest on record across the lower 48 states, federal recordkeepers announced Tuesday.
- Quieter oceans make for less-stressed whales
Quiet oceans make for calmer right whales, new research suggests. When fewer ships sail the Bay of Fundy, the big baleen whales are less stressed — as evidenced by hormone levels in their poop.
- PhotoBlog: Fishermen reel in shark the size of a school bus
Pakistanis reel in one of the biggest fish in the sea: a whale shark.
- Fatal shark attacks in 2011 at 20-year high
Fatal shark attacks across the globe reached a 20-year high in 2011, researchers report, while attacks in the U.S. were the lowest over the last decade and none were fatal.
- Sponsored By:
- Vulture 'restaurants' cater to endangered birds
Nepal has opened vulture "restaurants" to save the birds from extinction — and at the same time help impoverished villages become self-sufficient.
- Cape Cod dolphin beachings at 129; more expected
Nearly 130 dolphins have beached themselves on Cape Cod in the last three weeks, with 92 dying in what's become "the single largest stranding" in at least two decades in the Northeast.
- Mountain lion attacks 6-year-old in Texas park
Officials at Big Bend National Park in Texas were looking for a mountain lion that attacked and injured a 6-year-old boy as he walked with three other people.
- Are SeaWorld's killer whales slaves? Judge weighs case
The stars of SeaWorld were the main attraction in federal court as a judge weighed PETA's claim that they are being treated like slaves.
- Winderman: Another empty MVP for LeBron?
Winderman: 2-time winner says he's got a better game, but will he utilize it to win his first NBA title? - PBT: Perkins rips LeBron over his Blake tweet
- Jacobs to Gisele: 'Just stay cute and shut up'
Off the Bench: New York Giants running back Brandon Jacobs reacts to remarks made by Tom Brady's wife Gisele Bundchen, who criticized New England Patriots players after their Super Bowl defeat Sunday. - PFT: Harrison says criticism of Brady unfair
- PFT: Vick is America's most hated; Tiger's 2nd
PFT: According to the latest surveys conducted by Nielsen and partner E-Poll Market Research, published by Forbes, Vick is the most disliked athlete in all of sports, just edging out Tiger Woods. - PFT: Tuna text persuaded Ricky Williams to retire
- PBT: Rose will be game-time decision tonight
- Arc: UNC can show it's still elite against Duke
Arc: Everything should run through Harrison Barnes tonight, and there is no solid matchup for him one-on-one. Tied atop the ACC with Florida State, the Tar Heels should look to Barnes early and often. - HBT: Yankees are still shopping A.J. Burnett
- PHT: Winter Classic announcement on Thursday?

