Pubdate: Thu, 11 Apr 2002
Source: Advocate, The (LA)
Copyright: 2002 The Advocate, Capital City Press
Contact:  http://www.theadvocate.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2

OXYCONTIN ABUSE GETS LOOK FROM LEGISLATURE

Legislators began looking Tuesday at ways to stem abuse of the prescription 
narcotic Oxycontin, following a state report that at least 69 Louisiana 
residents have died during the past two years in connection with the 
painkiller.

Doctors prescribe OxyContin to treat severe pain for patients who suffer 
from medical problems such as cancer.

When crushed and snorted or mixed with water and injected by drug abusers, 
the potent medication can have effects similar to heroin.

Louisiana coroners connected the medication to 69 deaths in 16 parishes in 
the last two years, according to Louis Cataldie, medical director for the 
state Office for Addictive Disorders.

The state ranks 28th in the nation in OxyContin prescriptions.

Sen. Jerry Thomas, R-Franklinton, said he plans to introduce bills to 
address the abuse.

He said it could include requiring doctors to use tamper-resistant 
prescription pads, providing continuing education to pharmacists and 
requiring prescription monitoring and accountability.

The upcoming legislative session can only deal with fiscal matters, however.

"We certainly don't want to limit access to new medications or better 
medications," Thomas told the House and Senate health and welfare committees.

The drug has drawn national attention, with the Drug Enforcement 
Administration blaming OxyContin for 117 deaths in the past two years and 
suspecting it caused another 179.

There's a street market for the painkiller that boosts the problem, 
Cataldie said.

An OxyContin tablet costs only a few dollars, but the drug sells on the 
street for $20 to $40 a pill.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart