Pubdate: Tue, 19 Mar 2002 Source: Gadsden Times, The (AL) Copyright: 2002 The Gadsden Times Contact: http://www.gadsdentimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1203 Author: Lisa Rogers PRESCRIPTION DATABASE BILL OK'D BY TASK FORCE A database to track prescription drugs would have a price tag of at least $250,000 for startup and would cost at least that much annually to operate. A draft of legislation to establish a database to track prescription drugs was approved Monday at a meeting of the Prescription Drug Abuse Task Force meeting in Gadsden. The draft is expected to be presented to the governor and attorney general for approval and implementation. Drug addicts who "doctor shop" do not stay in one county. They move from place to place. That's why it is so important for Alabama to develop a database to track prescription drugs, an investigator with the Alabama Board of Medical Examiners said. Even though money for a database has not been set aside, the task force is looking at long-range plans, not just short-term, Sen. Larry Means, D-Attalla, who serves as chairman of the task force, said. Several deaths in the last couple of years from apparent overdoses of OxyContin prompted the formation of the task force. OxyContin is a prescription pain medication that provides pain relief when taken as prescribed. Those who abuse the drug crush the pill to destroy the time-release coating. OxyContin is still being abused, but the problems have slowed down tremendously, said Brantley Bishop, who investigates prescription drug abuse for the Etowah County Drug Task Force. Task force members agreed that until specifics of a database are complete and funding is available, some other measures can be taken to help reduce abuse of prescription drugs. That list also will be submitted to the governor and attorney general. The list includes: * Assign a state agency to formulate and implement an education program for public education awareness of prescription drug abuse. * Require that pharmacists distribute written warnings to patients when filling prescriptions for highly abused controlled substances that include criminal penalties for drug diversion and proper disposal of unneeded medications. * Encourage the Peace Officers Standard Training Commission to establish a training program for local and regional law enforcement teams to investigate and prosecute abusers and those who divert prescription drugs. * Establish a prescription drug overdose hotline at the UAB Medical Center similar to the poison control hotline to facilitate dissemination of information to the public on prevention, early intervention and treatment of prescription drug abuse. * Encourage the state's congressional delegation to develop and pass legislation requiring manufacturers of highly abused prescription drugs to incorporate technological safeguards into the products to reduce or eliminate the misuse of prescription drugs. * Develop and pass legislation prohibiting health plans and pharmacy benefit programs from requiring as a condition of payment for prescription drugs that the patient receive more than a 30-day supply of any controlled substance. * Ask the congressional delegation to pass laws that would make it a criminal offense for any person to obtain a controlled substance by the Internet. * Require coroners, medical examiners and hospital emergency rooms to report all cases of controlled substance drug overdoses and/or deaths caused by prescription drugs to the Department of Public Health, which would maintain statistical information on drug abuse. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel