Pubdate: Tue, 7 Aug 2001 Source: Daily News-Record, The (VA) Copyright: 2001 The Daily News-Record Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1519 Website: http://www.dnronline.com/ Author: Nick Dalby, News-Record Staff Writer WARNER COMES TO CITY To Learn About OxyContin "Like A Locust You Know Is Coming," Senator Says U.S. Sen. John Warner, R-Va., visited Harrisonburg Monday to get a better understanding of OxyContin from those on the front lines of the battle. Warner's two-hour fact-finding stopover was in response to the growing abuse of the controversial pain reliever that, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office, has claimed the lives of more than 60 Virginians since 1996. Most of the deaths occurred in the southwestern region of the state. Warner spoke with law enforcement officials from city and state agencies, representatives from the U.S. Attorney's Office and the state medical examiner's office to formulate a plan for waging war on the drug. The meeting was held at the Rockingham County Board of Supervisors in downtown Harrisonburg. The Ins And Outs Of OxyContin Two-thirds to three-quarters of the deaths were termed accidental, meaning the drug was abused by the user, who accidentally overdosed. Some deaths were suicides. "It's like a locust you know is coming," Warner told the audience. "And it's coming." OxyContin was developed by Purdue Pharma of Stamford, Conn., and was approved for patient use by the Food and Drug Administration in 1996. It was specifically designed to treat cancer patients, but it didn't take long for drug abusers to latch on to the powerful prescription pain reliever. "It's for people who deservedly need it," Warner said. "Somehow it got out into the hands of dirty drug dealers." Drug dealers, for the most part, acquire OxyContin through physicians by "doctor shopping," going from one doctor to another with complaints of pain. Once they have acquired the drug, it's sold on the street for 10 times its prescription value of 10 cents per milligram, Gregg Wood, health fraud investigator for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Roanoke told Warner during the meeting. The drug is prescribed in 10-, 20-, 40- and 80-milligram, 12-hour, time-released doses. Recently, doses of 160 milligrams were taken off the market by the manufacturer at the request of the U.S. Attorney's Office. The time-release action of OxyContin can be destroyed by crushing the pill, which releases its pain-killing relief immediately when it's snorted, injected or chewed. Some drug users call the euphoric high it produces better than sex, Wood said. Prescription Drug Abuse Prescription drug abuse, particularly abuse of OxyContin, came to the attention of Virginia law enforcement officials in 1997 during an investigation of insurance fraud, said Ruth Plagenhoff, interim U.S. Attorney for the Western District. The case involved vehicle accidents being staged and "victims" collecting large insurance settlements for injuries. In the course of the investigation, three unscrupulous doctors were identified prescribing medications without legitimate medical reasons. But where OxyContin is concerned today, prescription fraud involves a small minority of doctors, Plagenhoff said. For more than one hour, Warner listened to OxyContin horror stories from the gathered officials. He asked many questions, returning to one point several times - that of public education and the responsibility of patients when it comes to prescription narcotics. Warner stressed that it's illegal for patients to give away or sell their prescription medication. Physician Education Educating doctors on the proper procedure for treating patient pain was also discussed at length. Complaints of pain are the leading reasons patients see their doctors. But pain is one of the hardest complaints to diagnose, and many doctors simply take their patient's word and prescribe a pain medication. Wood suggested that doctors follow a strict protocol before prescribing powerful pain medication, such as OxyContin. Doctors who treat pain have an obligation to do it correctly, he said. He suggested that doctors: provide good evaluation and treatment plans; try conservative treatments first, such as physical therapy; slowly escalate the use of narcotics; document and review patient progress; assure patient compliance through pain contracts, urine testing and pill counts; and understand "doctor shopping" behavior. But the U.S. Attorney's Office says the most effective program offered "and one that has the potential to nearly erase the practice of doctor shopping" instituting an electronic prescription-monitoring program. By connecting every pharmacy into a computer network, investigators could easily track prescriptions. Anyone attempting to fill multiple prescriptions of pain relievers, particularly OxyContin, from numerous doctors, would easily be found out. The system is currently working in 18 states, including Kentucky, which has been hard hit by OxyContin abuse. Warner told the group he would find out if the Department of Justice could appropriate approximately $1 million to fund the program in Virginia. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D