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California Prescription Drug Monitoring Cut Amid 'Epidemic'

California Prescription Drug

  First Posted: 11/09/11 06:51 PM ET Updated: 11/09/11 06:51 PM ET

This article comes to us courtesy of California Watch.

By Christina Jewett

While federal authorities are calling the spike in prescription painkiller deaths an epidemic, California is dismantling a system that the White House identifies as a promising method to tackle the problem.

The CURES prescription drug monitoring program enables doctors to track people who shop from doctor to doctor seeking a Vicodin or OxyContin high.

The program also can help law enforcement connect the dots in illegal prescribing cases. A White House report [PDF] on the nation’s prescription drug crisis identified the tracking systems, which are in place in most states, as one major tool in helping to reduce drug diversion.

Funds for staff to oversee the system are a casualty of $70 million in budget cuts to the state Department of Justice for this year and next, according to the attorney general’s office. One Bay Area entrepreneur has submitted a ballot initiative [PDF] to restore the tracking system funding through a drug fee but has not yet started to gather signatures.

The cuts came just before the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a report showing that the rate of prescription painkiller overdose deaths has more than tripled during the past decade.

The CDC estimates that 40 people die each day from methadone, Vicodin, OxyContin and Opana overdoses.

Researchers identified a trio of trends underscoring the growth in prescription painkiller use. The overdose death toll since 1998 has nearly quadrupled, even as admissions to drug rehabilitation have jumped sixfold. At the same time, sales of the medications have increased four times. The CDC estimates that there was enough hydrocodone (an ingredient in Vicodin) being made in 2010 to medicate every American adult for a month.

Analyses in the CDC study show that sales of the opiate painkillers and death rates are not as high in California as in many other states. Still, they are rivaling car crashes in the number of Americans killed each year.

The state does not lack high-profile cases of people addicted to prescription painkillers. King of Pop Michael Jackson reportedly was hooked on Demerol before he died of an overdose of another drug. Corey Haim, a 1980s heartthrob, died after struggling with prescription drug addiction; his death was linked to a major OxyContin ring.

Outside of Hollywood, the drugs’ effects can be devastating. Robert Pack, an East Bay technology entrepreneur, lost his two young children after they were struck by a woman who was under the influence of alcohol and Vicodin.

Pack helped convert the state’s prescription drug monitoring system from a paper-based system that could take several months to produce a report about a patient. With his and others’ financial support, the CURES program was upgraded in 2009 to a database that can be accessed instantly by doctors and pharmacists who register.

Pack has filed paperwork for a ballot initiative that would levy a quarter-cent fee on prescription pain drugs and use the money to provide stable funding for the program. He said signature-gathering will begin if his ballot language is approved by the attorney general's office.

Pack said he pursued a similar effort with state Sen. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Walnut Creek, but the bill did not advance.

“I keep navigating new paths, new roads,” Pack said. “I have plenty of years ahead to do it. I lost my two children due to it, and I have plenty of years ahead.”

The California Legislature considered but did not pass a 2001 bill meant to institute prevention strategies for drug overdose deaths. Lawmakers passed a bill by former Sen. Mark Ridley-Thomas that set up a pilot project in seven counties to distribute a drug that counteracts opiate drug overdoses.

Christina Jewett is an investigative reporter for California Watch, a project of the non-profit Center for Investigative Reporting. Find more California Watch stories here.

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This article comes to us courtesy of California Watch. By Christina Jewett While federal authorities are calling the spike in prescription painkiller deaths an epidemic, California is dismantlin...
This article comes to us courtesy of California Watch. By Christina Jewett While federal authorities are calling the spike in prescription painkiller deaths an epidemic, California is dismantlin...
 
 
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01:40 PM on 11/10/2011
Just one more thing....this article states the deaths are rivaling car crash deaths....will this make you too afraid to drive today? "epidemic, shocking, devastating" Scary words but they don't ever seem to mention "life changing, quality of life, increased level of function"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
proudloudlib
"I'm not deaf. I'm ignoring you."
01:33 PM on 11/10/2011
Where are these doctors that are prescribing these pills? My doctor won't prescribe any thing more than an NSAID, even in very small quantities, regardless of how extreme my pain is. So while some doctors are over-prescribing, other doctors are scared to prescribe at all. Meanwhile, I'm killing myself with Tylenol and Advil, and still not getting any relief.
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02:20 PM on 11/10/2011
Find a new Doc.
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11:36 PM on 11/10/2011
I have had three different doctors in 3 years and none would ever prescribe these pills...if I have pain, it is tylenol or aspirtin and that is it.....just had a surgery and was given lite anathesthetic..no pain killers left the hospital....Doctors are afraid to prescribe them.
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ie
ugh.
01:31 PM on 11/10/2011
I suppose they'll sell more painkillers, and anti-depressants, etc., now that they're cracking down on medical marijuana. The patients have to try something else....what better than a highly profitable product that is highly addictive?
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ctaylor1968
12:38 PM on 11/10/2011
I guess they are too busy going after small pot farmers and dispensaries to bother with the hard stuff. I know the hard stuff is more profitable to big pharma so I guess this makes sence, since you cant get addicted to pot.
09:22 AM on 11/10/2011
Sounds like big pharma needs to step up and be accountable for the products they push on the American public.
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ie
ugh.
01:22 PM on 11/10/2011
Yeah, that's going to happen...
07:21 AM on 11/10/2011
Illegal drugs are very profitable. The health industry is now mainly drug therapies. Do you think the boundary between legal and illegal is driven by $?
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ie
ugh.
01:34 PM on 11/10/2011
Illegal drugs are highly profitable for someone other than big pharma. If they can't get a cut of the action, they have to move the action.
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ddokken69
03:58 AM on 11/10/2011
What sucks about this whole pain-killer is is that there are people like me that are made up of plastic and metal than what I was born with that have no choice but to take them just to function each day but all these pill-popping yo-yo's make it harder for real patients to obtain the drug legally.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nicon
01:43 AM on 11/10/2011
70 Million. SF spends that much tracking down, arresting and jailing Marijuana users.
Marijuana killed 0 people last year.

Time to stop arresting hippies and put our tax money to work doing something useful.
08:22 AM on 11/10/2011
That would be to easy. It makes to much sense. It would work. Can't have that.
11:50 AM on 11/10/2011
If pharma owned the medical marijuana-growing biz, there's be legal pot plantations the size of Kansas.
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ctaylor1968
01:15 PM on 11/10/2011
True, but they would probably alter it as to make it addicting.
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ie
ugh.
01:33 PM on 11/10/2011
And they're probably positioning themselves for that now. Buying up land and legislators to make that happen takes a long time.
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malnyst67
Tea parties are for little girls...
01:02 AM on 11/10/2011
Hell, it seems that there's a "Pain management clinic" on every block in central Florida that will practically give anyone painkillers without question. Florida is a pill mill and doctors buy about 90% of all Oxycodone sold in this country. People don't have to worry about doctor shopping, there's no regulation here, yet. Our state has finally put it's foot down and have enacted laws to regulate them and "weed out the bad apples" which far outnumber the legitimate clinics.
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lastmanstanding99
That's what my Dr. said?
12:31 AM on 11/10/2011
Typical?
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olitenup
11:16 PM on 11/09/2011
But our fellow citizens at DEA will bust a legitimate medical mj farm while big pharma runs rough-shod over the feds pushing their chemicals with known unhealthy side effects.

This oozes hypocrisy and must end.
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Mark Twainer
A little something about me
11:49 PM on 11/09/2011
Exactly my thoughts...shifting the blame just like everyone else who's guilty in the media right now.
08:26 AM on 11/10/2011
It seems everytime a doctor gave me a pill a few months later some lawyer on tv was wanting me to call them because it was linked to cancer or something. I went back to a herb that has been working fine for thousands of years and never killed anyone. Seems to work better to.