Call for ban on codeine - health - 07 October 2010 - New Scientist

THE widely used painkiller codeine doesn’t work in some people and can be fatal in others, so its use should be halted, say researchers at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada.
Codeine works by being metabolised to morphine in the body, but the extent of that metabolism depends on a person’s genetic make-up, so the amount of morphine produced varies.
In an editorial published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal this week, Stuart MacLeod and Noni MacDonald say the problem is especially relevant for infants, citing examples of two children who died after being given codeine following a tonsillectomy, and two studies that show non-fatal toxicity to infants being breastfed by mothers taking codeine.
The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada, has stopped using codeine. The authors are calling for others to follow suit.
The UK Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency currently has no plans to stop codeine being sold over the counter. "As only 1 to 2 per cent of the population has an enhanced metabolism most patients could continue to take codeine," says Florence Palmer of the MHRA.
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this was shown on television a belgium documentary about money and drugs and legalized crime.
Codeine leads to addiction.
Codeine leads to suicide rate above normal.
It is used in a lot painkillers, however in concentrations not enough to be usefully for killing pain, but enough to keep people addicted, and thus keep selling those drugs.
Like dealers selling XTC for money, the difference is small.
Fact there are enough alternatives we dont need it still it is widely used, for economic gain by several companies.
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