Pubdate: Thu, 15 Aug 2002 Source: State, The (SC) Copyright: 2002 The State Contact: http://www.thestate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/426 Author: Tracy Edge ILLEGAL PRESCRIPTION USE SHOULD NOT ENDANGER AID TO PATIENTS In July, The State ran a front-page story discussing illegal abuse of the pain drug OxyContin and its effect in the Carolinas. The article was filled with emotional stories of addiction and rogue clinicians who apparently deal drugs for profit. The stories dramatically exposed a serious public health problem unknown to many. My point of concern is that the article focused on only one medication, OxyContin, while many prescription drugs are subject to illegal abuse and can be deadly if not taken under a physician's guidance. It also overlooked the need to protect patients with a legitimate need for pain medicines from having their access to these medications endangered by unwise enforcement policies. The fact is that a lot of prescription medications are abused. We have to be careful not to allow our reaction to this problem of abuse to affect the ability of legitimate patients to get medications they truly need. In the case of the Myrtle Beach Clinic, the story failed to mention that the doctors were charged not merely with overprescribing OxyContin. They were charged with over-prescribing other medications with the potential for abuse, such as Percodan, Percocet, Tylox, Hydrocodone, Lorcet, Lortab, Xanax and Ambien. All these medications and many others are abused and illegally sold on the street. At the same time, they bring relief to patients who suffer from persistent pain and who take them properly under a doctor's care. Focusing on one medication does not bring us closer to solving the larger problem. It's important for all of us to be aware of the full threat drug abuse holds for our state. It can cause loss of livelihood and family, addiction and, in some cases, even death. But what most people may not realize is that many pain patients, for example cancer patients and people with chronic pain, desperately need proper access to those same drugs. We must increase our efforts to fight illegal abuse of prescribed drugs. But while doing so, it is equally important for us to fight to protect the rights of patients who have a legitimate need for pain medication. When sensationalized stories are written that focus on abuse of a specific prescription drug, such as OxyContin, such actions may make doctors afraid to prescribe the medication. Pain patients may also become afraid to take a medication that is dubbed "the heroin of the 2000s" by the press, for fear of being perceived as addicts. Prescription drug abuse is in some ways unique in its nature and implications. How we battle prescription drug abuse while protecting patients' rights requires immediate attentionas an issue separate from combating illegal narcotics that serve no medicinal purpose. The misconduct of a few should not be allowed to yield consequences that damage innocent pain sufferers who obey the law and follow their doctors' instructions. Unfortunately, that is exactly what can happen when public officials crack down unwisely on the availability of a particular pain medication or launch sensational public campaigns against a particular drug brand. Obviously, everyone can agree that a campaign should be waged against prescription drug abuse. As a member of the General Assembly, I intend to look for better ways to wage that war. However, it is pointless to target one drug. The better course is to educate the public and take preventive measures against prescription drug abuse. We need to educate ourselves with the facts and use innovative prevention measures to ensure that pain patients do not become innocent victims in the war against drug abuse. In the campaign to control the abuse of prescription drugs, the Legislature, state agencies and the medical community must work together to fight the problem. We need to start taking steps to better control prescriptions within our state Medicaid system by investigating and implementing an effective prescription-monitoring program. Doctors need to receive proper training to treat pain as well as spot the signs of addiction. We need to make sure we protect the doctors who appropriately treat patients, while ensuring that doctors who are proven to have intentionally abused their position are punished, not just by revoking their right to practice medicine, but also prosecuting under South Carolina state law like other drug criminals. While we continue this fight against illegal use of drugs, let's keep in mind the right of patients to get the treatment they desperately need without fear, difficulty or shame. Rep. Edge represents Horry County in the S.C. House. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens