Pubdate: Wed, 13 Jun 2001 Source: Charleston Daily Mail (WV) Copyright: 2001 Charleston Daily Mail Contact: http://www.dailymail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/76 Author: Bob Kelly, Political Editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?186 (Oxycontin) OFFICIALS GETTING HOOKED The attorney general's staffers had been restless, bored and reduced to casting about the legal landscape for an occasional fast-buck cable operator or unscrupulous aluminum siding salesman to hammer with a consent decree. Then, last winter, at first barely perceptible, an exciting scent drifted through the corridors. Darrell McGraw sniffed it. They all sniffed it, the delicious yet faint odor of a potentially massive payoff, perhaps one that could be obtained without a whole lot of work. It smelled something like tobacco money. But this tantalizing aroma emanated not from a manufacturer whose dangerous product had been used as intended but rather from manufacturers whose beneficial product invites widespread misuse. The product is the pain-killer OxyContin and people in the attorney general's jurisdiction were cheating, lying, prostituting themselves, even robbing to get their hands on some. The OxyContin abuse problem seems to have disproportionately fallen on Southern West Virginia, which to dispassionate observers may say more about Southern West Virginia than OxyContin. But that was but a piffle to McGraw and his staff. Like hungry hounds chasing a fat sheep, they are in pursuit of OxyContin manufacturers. The suit was filed Monday in the friendly confines of McDowell Circuit Court. The state will try to show the drug companies went overboard in promoting OxyContin's efficacy to doctors, causing them to write prescriptions they shouldn't have. Paul Nusbaum, secretary of the state Department of Health and Human Resources, may have touched on the core of the case with this observation: "A lot of the use and abuse is in small rural communities. When you have rural physicians who are isolated and get visits from drug representatives, they are told that if they don't use this drug (OxyContin) they can be sued for malpractice." So there you have it, doctors who suspend judgment and take advice from traveling salesmen, yet another example of West Virginia's historic isolation-induced vulnerability, with an unenlightened populace unable to resist exploitation by outside profiteers. If Nusbaum is right, one could conclude the larger threat to public health and welfare in rural areas is not so much overprescribing of OxyContin but gullible bumpkin doctors who somehow managed to survive at least seven years of rigorous medical training and get a license. The same properties that bring unusual relief to many cancer sufferers also create tremendous potential for OxyContin abuse. People hold up drug stores to get OxyContin without even bothering to demand the cash. McGraw and company have just barged in and handed manufacturers a note. They want the cash. No other state has filed such a suit. Manufacturers may rue the day they made OxyContin available here in the first place. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake