Pubdate: Thu, 23 Oct 2003 Source: Joplin Globe, The (MO) Copyright: 2003 The Joplin Globe Contact: http://www.joplinglobe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/859 Author: Debby Woodin COLD MEDICINES PULLED OFF SHELVES Retailers are locking away some common cold medicines and herbal remedies in response to a change in state law regulating the sale of ephedrine and a sting by the Jasper County Drug Task Force. The task force is asking the county prosecutor to cite clerks at 21 retail stores for a misdemeanor violation of selling too much ephedrine in a single transaction. On Aug. 28, state law changed to limit the sale of ephedrine-or pseudoephedrine-containing drugs to no more than three boxes or three grams. The drug is regulated because it is an essential component in the manufacture of methamphetamine, a homemade stimulant that law enforcement officers say is widespread in Southwest Missouri. Prosecutor Dean Dankelson received the task force's reports and requests for charges on Wednesday and he will have to review them to determine whether the charges are to be filed, a spokesman in his office said. Ephedrine or pseudoephedrine are used in some decongestant cold medicines like Sudafed and Actifed. It also is used in products that are marketed for weight loss and stamina. The task force's sting and the regulation of ephedra has alarmed and frustrated people who sell or use it for legitimate purposes. "We just pulled the products off the shelves. We will put them in a locked cabinet and customers will have to ask for them," said Brooke Rentfro, manager of Food 4 Less, 2800 E. 32nd St. She said the store management did not know that state law had regulated the amount of product sold to three packages and that it is alleged that a clerk in Friday's sting sold five packages. She said the law is an inconvenience to customers who will have to contact a store employee to buy even a box now that the medicines have had to be locked up to assure compliance with the law. Paying The Price Some have even quit selling products containing ephedra. "My personal choice was, when I heard that everybody was limiting their sales, to limit ours and we have not been selling ephedra drugs at all," said Mari An Willis, owner of Oak Street Health & Herbs in Carthage. "There's other things you can take. "What I hate to see is the American public paying the price for a few people who choose to abuse or misuse products." Her misgivings are shared by herbalists nationwide. Moves toward not only local but federal governmental regulation of ephedra had stirred debate about whether the product should be regulated and, if so, how much. Action by the federal Food and Drug Administration to study the health effects of ephedra ignited controversy among herbalists and herbal drug suppliers last year and this year. The FDA contends that ephedra should be federally regulated as the result a study by the think-tank Rand Corp. that showed ephedra, typically used for weight control, energy or as a booster to physical fitness training and athletic performance, showed that it caused heart palpitations, blood pressure spikes and even strokes. Areas of the country that, like Southwest Missouri, have experienced what law enforcement officers have said is nearly epidemic meth abuse also are in favor of regulating it. But, groups like the American Herbalists Guild have registered their opposition with the FDA, saying that non-herbalists misunderstand the use of the whole plant versus extractions made from it that are used in the addictive meth. The guild said there is "persistent confusion" about ephedra in medical literature and the Rand report. In an a position paper the guild sent to the FDA and published on it's Web site, www.americanherbalistsguild.com, the guild said: "This confusion implies the crude herb (ephedra) is interchangeable with the ephedrine, the alkaloid, or even with commercial dietary supplements containing isolated ephedra alkaloids in combination with other agents, like caffeine." Willis, who has been in the herbal and health-food business for 26 years, said ephedra has long been used with success by those who study plants and herbs. "Ephedra - ma haung is it's Chinese name - has traditionally been safely used for many years, probably hundreds of years as a whole herb. If you don't probably use something correctly, of course you can be harmed by it. But you can misuse any food, including coffee, caffeine and sugar." Jane Case, the owner of Good Vibrations, an herb store at 20th Street and Pearl Avenue, agrees. She has customers who buy it specifically to treat allergies. But, she said she has cautioned customers about some of the side effects of ephedra. "It's not a product that I encourage," said Case, whose store was not among those included in the sting. "I've never sold more than one bottle of it at a time," she said. Exceeding The Limits The drug task force said in a written statement that undercover officers were sent to more than 50 outlets in Jasper County. Most of the 21 that allegedly sold an amount over the legal limit were convenience stores and grocery clerks. A clerk at only one health store, Margie's Herb Shop, is among the 21. Herb Shop owner Margie Lundien declined to talk about the sting, saying she wants to make a public statement, but that she first wants to meet with law enforcement officials. A clerk at that store was cited for selling a product called "Magic Herb." Willis said "Magic Herb" wholesalers have told dealers that the product does not apply to ephedra laws but a representative of Magic Herb, who would not give her name, declined to comment on whether the product is excluded from state law or why. But, clerks like those at the health stores, pharmacies and grocers are faced with a tall order in identifying products or combinations of products addressed by the law, said Joe Courtright, vice president of pharmaceuticals for May's Drug Warehouse, based in Tulsa, Okla. A clerk at the chain's Webb City store was one on the list of locations cited by the task force. May's stores had already taken action to comply with the law, Courtright said. "Items containing large quantities of pseudoephedrine were pulled off the shelves completely and put them under the counter," where customers will have to ask for them, he said. "The other products we have put security tags on. "But with thousands of different cough and cold medicines, it's hard for a cashier to determine" all of them that contain the regulated drugs or, when bought in combination with other cold or cough products, exceed the law's limit. "That's what happened in this particular case," Courtright said. The undercover officer bought a mix of cold and cough products, not a large supply of one particular item, he said. "It's easy to police selling tobacco or alcohol to minors, that's pretty cut and dried. But this one is a lot more difficult because of the huge number of products that contain pseudoephedrine," Courtright said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman