Pubdate: Thu, 06 Apr 2000 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Denise Grady STUDY FINDS PHARMACIES' STOCKS LOW IN MINORITY NEIGHBORHOODS Cancer patients and others with severe pain who live in black, Asian and Hispanic neighborhoods may have trouble getting medicine for their pain, because their local pharmacies often do not stock morphine and related drugs, doctors are reporting. A survey of 347 pharmacies in New York City found that in nonwhite neighborhoods, only 25 percent of pharmacies had enough morphine-like drugs, or opioids, to treat severe pain. But in white neighborhoods, 72 percent of the stores had adequate supplies. Although the survey was conducted in New York, interviews with pharmacists and doctors in Los Angeles, Chicago, Minneapolis and Detroit suggested similar problems in those cities. Druggists who did not carry the medicines blamed low demand, onerous regulations and fear of theft. But when the analysis of the numbers was adjusted to take actual crime rates into account, opioid availability was still linked to the racial makeup of the neighborhood. Some doctors who reviewed the report suggested that the real culprit was a subtle form of racial bias. "This study comes on the heels of many other studies that have documented a disparity in treatment in which racial and ethnic factors seem to be the predominant factor, and that's quite disturbing," said Dr. Richard Payne, chief of the pain and palliative care service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Dr. Payne did not take part in the study, but wrote an editorial that is being published with it today in The New England Journal of Medicine. The study itself was directed by Dr. Sean Morrison of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine. But others said racial bias was too simple an explanation. Selig Corman, a pharmacist who is director of professional affairs for the Pharmacists Society of the State of New York, in Albany, said the lack of drugs in certain neighborhoods was more likely due to low demand for them, because pharmacists cannot afford to stock drugs that people do not buy. And in low-income areas, where people lack insurance, sales may be slow. The study did not determine why demand was low -- whether, for example, patients had been turned down and had given up asking. But Dr. Payne said that if the claim of low demand is true, it may be another symptom of the larger problem, that pain is inadequately treated in minority groups, in large part because doctors do not prescribe enough medicine. Reasons that have been suggested for the failure to prescribe include the false perception among some doctors that blacks are less sensitive to pain than whites, or more likely to be addicts. Whatever the reason, the authors of the survey said it offered new evidence that many blacks and Hispanics, including elderly people with cancer, either do not receive proper treatment for severe pain, or face obstacles and delays in obtaining it. Doctors say the problem fits into a nationwide pattern of racial inequality in health care, revealed by recent studies showing that blacks are less likely than whites to be referred for kidney transplants or surgery for early-stage cancers of the breast, colon or lung, and that blacks and Hispanics are less likely to be given painkillers for broken bones or pain following surgery. Dr. Morrison, a specialist in geriatrics and palliative care at Mount Sinai, said he and his colleagues began their study because they found that many black and Hispanic patients could not have prescriptions filled for opioids at their neighborhood pharmacies. Often, pharmacists would not even offer to order the products, and when they did, it could take several days or a week for the medicine to arrive. "For severe pain, even a 24-hour delay is unacceptable," Dr. Morrison said. Dr. Morrison described a 74-year-old Hispanic woman from the South Bronx with severe back pain from a spinal disease, for whom he prescribed morphine and a similar drug. When he called her the next day, she was still in agony. Her daughter had gone to every pharmacy in the area, but could not get either drug. Dr. Morrison helped the daughter find a pharmacy in Manhattan that would fill the prescription. Dr. Morrison and his colleagues conducted a telephone survey of 347 drugstores in all five boroughs, both chain and independent, asking pharmacists whether they stocked various forms of morphine and other opioids like fentanyl patches, hydromorphone and oxycodone. The researchers used census data to identify white and nonwhite neighborhoods. They defined nonwhite areas as those in which at least 60 percent of the residents were nonwhite. In white neighborhoods, at least 80 percent of the residents were white. Although some pharmacists cited fear of robbery as a reason for not selling opioids, Dr. Morrison and his colleagues found that when they took actual crime rates into account, the differences were not large enough to account for the great difference in drug availability. But Mr. Corman said many pharmacists feared crime nonetheless, as well as being duped by stolen or phony prescriptions, which he said pharmacists could be fined for filling. "I know some pharmacies who are very anxious about armed robberies, and will have signs saying they don't carry narcotics," Mr. Corman said. "Is that any different from a sign saying, 'We don't have more than $50 in the drawer'?" Asif Noor, a pharmacist interviewed at the Shawn Pharmacy on Wyckoff Avenue in Ridgewood, Queens, said he did not carry the strongest opioids, because they attracted addicts. "People come with fake prescriptions, will start stealing and will finish prescriptions very early and demand refills," Mr. Noor said. "Once you have junkies in the store, then the government starts watching you." Jim Schiffer, an owner of the Sunset Pharmacy in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, said that he had been held up for opioid drugs many times over the years and that other pharmacists even had to worry about theft by their own employees. "We're afraid of being targets, and the poor people suffer because of that," Mr. Schiffer said. In Minneapolis, Ed Findell at Diamond Lake Pharmacy, said he gave up stocking opioids in 1984 because he was held up so many times. "Eventually you learn and you just stop carrying it," Mr. Findell said. Dr. Angel T. Ponce, a cancer specialist in Los Angeles who treats mostly blacks and Hispanics, said that a quarter of the patients for whom he prescribed opioids come back within three days, unable to fill their prescriptions, regardless of what kind of insurance they had. In a mostly black and Hispanic neighborhood on Chicago's South Side, Jay Patel, a pharmacist at Southern Pharmacy, said those who stocked opioids risked being robbed and had to deal with onerous paperwork. "It's a headache," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea