Everyone Urged to Take Part in Drug Take Back Day Event

By Michael Dora, USDA Rural Development Indiana State Director

In 2016, Ohio corn and soybean farmer Roger Winemiller lost two of his three children to drugs.  Roger is not alone.  Last year, over 64,000 Americans died from a drug overdose.  At almost 174 people each day, this is more than the number of Americans who died in a car accident or a gun-related homicide.  Each person who died was someone’s mother or father, son or daughter, brother or sister.  Many of these mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters were also part of rural America.

Today, in the midst of this nationwide epidemic, small towns and rural places from Oregon to Maine have been particularly impacted by opioid misuse.  Opioids are highly effective painkillers with legitimate medical uses.   However, with their efficacy, opioids are also highly addictive and have become a frequent gateway to substance abuse, with users often transitioning from prescription medications to illicit and deadly drugs such as heroin.

Last fall, two leading farm organizations released a survey which found that nearly 50 percent of rural Americans have been directly impacted by opioid abuse.  With these numbers, the opioid crisis is threatening the quality of life and economic opportunity in many rural communities.  This epidemic is impacting worker productivity, increasing health care demands, and putting substantial stress on limited emergency response, law enforcement, and social service resources.  Further, this issue is also making economic development even more difficult for small towns that are already operating on slim budgets and struggling to attract new business.

An effective solution to this crisis will take leadership, collaboration, and creativity from a broad range of partners at the Federal, state and local level.  In rural America, a solution will also mean all hands-on deck– from the business sector to churches, 4-H clubs, and the local school system.  This Saturday, each of us can take a simple but important step forward to protect our family, our friends, and our community by participating in the National Prescription Drug Take Back Day.

From high school sports injuries to a routine dental procedure or recurring back pain, many of us have left over prescription drugs.  Last fall, the biannual Take Back Day collected over 900,000 pounds of unused pills.  Sitting in medicine cabinets, these pills aren’t simply taking up space.  These pills can kill.  Research shows that nearly half of all people who are misusing opioids got that pill from friends or family– not from a dealer on the street.

On Saturday April 28th, we can protect our family, our friends, and our community by getting rid of those unused prescriptions at a Take Back Day collection site.  Visit takebackday.dea.gov for more information about the dangers of unused prescription drugs and to locate a safe collection site near you.  With this small action, each of us can take an important step forward in guarding our loved ones and the towns we love and call home from the tragic path of addiction.

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