
From 2004-2009 U.S. Army Opiate Addiction Treatment Enrollment Rose by 500%
The number of soldiers enrolling in military opiate addiction treatment programs increased by 500% between 2004 and 2009.
In 2004, 89 soldiers enrolled in an opiate addiction treatment program, by 2009 that number had jumped to 529; and half of that increase occurred in 2009 alone, in response, say experts, to an upsurge in troops being sent to heroin laden Afghanistan.
Opiate use in the world’s leading opium poppy producing nation is a problem for the US military, with experts conceding that heroin use is widespread and easily available, even on American military bases. Ex-American soldiers who served in Afghanistan report that heroin use is especially common amongst Afghani soldiers.
Although more U.S. troops are requiring treatment than in previous years, the Army has caught very few of its soldiers testing positive for opiate use through its random drug testing program.
More like this

Getting High on Suboxone? The FDA Says It's Happening - Ex NIDA Director Blames Doctors
Users taking Suboxone to stave off the withdrawal pains of an opiate addiction aren't supposed to be able to abuse the medication. That was the idea anyway when the FDA approved the drug in 2002 for take-home use. Today's thriving street market for the drug has the FDA change its tune.

Pain Expert Says Doctors Are Too Scared to Prescribe Medications – People Living in Pain
An expert in pain management from the College of Pharmacy at Oregon State University says that millions of Americans are living in pain because doctors are afraid to prescribe sufficient pain killers.

Military Insurance to Cover Long Term Methadone and Suboxone Therapy
Defense Department to reverse an insurance coverage ban on long term methadone maintenance therapy for military personnel.

Using Opiates in Massachusetts More Dangerous than Overseas Combat?
Mass. state drugs commission calls opiate use in the commonwealth an “epidemic” and to emphasize the point, compares the numbers of state citizens that die in overseas combat with those that die from drug overdoses – saying that drug overdoses cause 42 times more deaths.

Opiate Overdoses Up Dramatically in Canada
The number of people in dying in Ontario Canada after overdosing on prescription medications has doubled since the 1990s.