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Prescription Drug Abuse: States Link Rx Databases To Watch For Abuse

EMERY P. DALESIO   10/15/10 10:26 AM ET   AP

Prescription Drug Abuse

RALEIGH, N.C. — Starting next year, dozens of states will begin knitting together databases to watch prescription drug abuse, from powerful painkillers to diet pills.

With federal money and prodding, states are being asked to sign onto an agreement allowing police, pharmacies and physicians to check suspicious prescription pill patterns from Nevada to North Carolina.

Civil liberties and privacy advocates have objected to the state databases, which would be linked with technology and standards developed by the Justice and Homeland Security departments.

Thirty-four states operate databases to fight a drug problem authorities say is growing more deadly than heroin.

"I've got people that are kin to me that's addicted and I see firsthand what it does," said Tracy Carter, sheriff in Lee County, N.C.. about 30 miles southwest of Raleigh. "The thing that's so darn frustrating is our young people don't think it's that big of a deal. 'It's a pill. It won't hurt me. The doctor prescribed it.' But it's worse than crack cocaine."

North Carolina had 826 unintentional deaths due to controlled substances last year, said Bill Bronson, the state health official in charge of the database. In comparison, there were 482 homicides statewide.

Nationally, there were 27,658 overdose deaths from prescription medication in 2007 – more than heroin and cocaine combined, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported in July. The threat is increasing as the most addictive pain relievers including OxyContin, which can produce a euphoric feeling, become more common, the Drug Enforcement Administration said.

Penney Cowan, founder of the American Chronic Pain Association, said she understands the need for monitoring potential abuse. But she worries the databases will discourage people who legitimately need painkillers. Physicians already are spooked by the fear their legitimate prescribing may trigger interest from investigators, she said.

"What we never hear about is how people with pain, who because they take these medications, are able to function, to be a productive part of society," Cowan said.

The databases alert physicians and pharmacies to patients who see several doctors to collect multiple prescriptions, letting them judge whether to refuse a potential abuser. Law officers say the databases allows them to document a pattern of abuse after investigations or informants point to a suspected pill dealer or dirty doctor.

A 2006 report conducted for the Justice Department said prescription drug databases cut the supply of painkillers and stimulants, reducing the probability of their abuse. The rate of painkiller abuse would have been 10 percent higher by 2003 without the databases, the report said.

The Prescription Monitoring Program Information Exchange would swap information through a central hub at Ohio's Board of Pharmacy. State databases were checked more than two million times in 2008, the Justice Department said. The databases flagged prescription activity on nearly 500,000 more potential abusers.

A proposed interstate compact will be unveiled in time for legislatures to consider it when they assemble next year, said John Mountjoy, policy and research director of the Council of State Governments, a national nonprofit based in Lexington, Ky.

The contract would preserve state-by-state differences that include control of the databases by law enforcement agencies in Texas and California, health departments in North Carolina and Alabama, and pharmacy boards in more than a dozen states.

Doctors are encouraged to check the databases, but in 19 states the law says they aren't required to do so, according to the National Alliance for Model State Drug Laws.

There are also differing limits on law officers' access. Some states require investigators to get a warrant or court order, while others just require an active investigation on a suspect. Vermont doesn't allow law officers to access the database.

Some privacy groups are worried about hackers and identity theft after millions of electronic records were stolen from Virginia's database last year.

North Carolina radio talk shows and bloggers erupted in September when sheriffs proposed changing state law to give them easier access to the database. A common complaint was that investigators could invade their privacy, though most didn't know sheriff's deputies have been able to query the database since 2007.

"The problem is the public doesn't know about this database," said Daren Bakst, legal and regulatory studies director of the conservative John Locke Foundation in Raleigh. "You have access to a database of so many innocent individuals in order to find a tiny percentage who may be abusing."

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RALEIGH, N.C. — Starting next year, dozens of states will begin knitting together databases to watch prescription drug abuse, from powerful painkillers to diet pills. With federal money and pro...
RALEIGH, N.C. — Starting next year, dozens of states will begin knitting together databases to watch prescription drug abuse, from powerful painkillers to diet pills. With federal money and pro...
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07:31 AM on 10/19/2010
This problem is growing at an alarming pace. I believe we must educate as many people as possible! It is possible to turn a life around. I am living proof!
http://www.pressingtheissue.com
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MerrieWay
02:31 AM on 10/19/2010
While policing for drug trafficking...how about getting Pharma Advertisements off of TV? Victims of drug use are being hypnotized daily by this unconscionable barrage of selling. So, the patient visits the doctor and mentions their headaches and the drug AD, and Doc gives them a sample and prescription and sends them on their MerrieWay.
Then, when the drug's cost is prohibitive, the black market, Canada, and Mexico become options for continued drug use. Wake-up! When 60% of a nation takes drugs, we need to examine the power of addiction, and the ramifications in maintaining homeostasis.
01:16 AM on 10/17/2010
Cunning - baffling and powerful - young or old - rich or poor - black or white.
Euphoria is a escape that tempts anyone, is it reality? http://www.soberlivingbythesea.blogspot.com
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JayZee
Biofilm Slayer
10:13 AM on 10/16/2010
Let's star with kindergarten and medical child abuse.Remember this headline:
"June 23, 2004
Bush To Impose Psychiatric Drug Regime"
Plans to screen whole US population for mental illness The Texas Medication Algorithm Project (TMAP) will serve, according to the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, as a model for the upcoming initiative. The TMAP medication guidelines were established in 1995 as an "expert consensus" based on the opinions of prescribers, rather than an analysis of scientific studies.

Read more.
http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/sepp/2004/06/23/bush_to_impose_psychiatric_drug_regime.htm
Ooopsy, it got a little out of hand.
Remember how hookey this was...pResident Checklenuts - on the teevee telling you how to medicate you child or the terrist win.Certainly the real terrorist's won - (the medical establishment and the MSM) WON big time.
07:34 AM on 10/19/2010
Wow.. I had no idea! Creepy.. and yet does not surprise me one bit.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
06:43 AM on 10/16/2010
I love big brother in the morning, it smells of...
Ryan Cornelius
Atlas Shrugged is as real as Twilight...
10:55 PM on 10/15/2010
The legitimate fear doctors have these days about prescribing pain medication is what caused me to suffer for years until my doctor gave in and started prescribing actual pain reducing medication instead of off-label and in-effective medications such as neurontin and NSAID's which caused more harm than the muscular dystrophy that is causing the pain.
Privacy destroying databases like these are prime targets for criminals, not just for identity theft but for use to target the sick and weak who have medications that sell for big money on the street guaranteed to be sitting on a shelf or medicine cabinet.
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LinAus
04:08 PM on 10/16/2010
Exactly.
07:39 AM on 10/19/2010
Yes.. Finally someone who gets it! While I can see how this plan has its good intentions, is it really worth destroying more of our privacy? As a recovering heroin addict I tell you that if people want drugs, they will get them.. one way or another. What got me turned around was just getting tired of playing the game. It was miserable! Thats the point where I finally sought out help. To my surprise, the help worked, all I had to do was try!
http://www.pressingtheissue.com