Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jan 2004
Source: Des Moines Register (IA)
Copyright: 2004 The Des Moines Register.
Contact: http://DesMoinesRegister.com/help/letter.html
Website: http://desmoinesregister.com/index.html
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123
Author: Tom Alex

METH TIE: HY-VEE RESTRICTS SALES OF COLD PILLS

Products Meth-Makers Look For Will Be Kept In The Pharmacy.

Iowa's largest grocery chain has clamped down on the sale of common cold 
remedies that can be used to make methamphetamine.

Hy-Vee Food Store officials announced Thursday that products with 
pseudoephedrine, a decongestant, will be moved to the pharmacy, where they 
will be sold only to people who show identification and sign their names.

The stores will limit purchase of the 14 name-brand cold, allergy and sinus 
remedies to two packages per visit. Children's medicines are not included.

The new rules, in effect at 219 Hy-Vee and Drug Town stores in seven 
states, 127 in Iowa, come as Iowa's top drug-enforcement agent is pushing 
lawmakers for similar statewide restrictions.

"This will only inconvenience the meth-makers, which is good. We don't want 
them to make it," said Jan Reuskens, who shopped at the East Euclid Hy-Vee 
in Des Moines on Thursday. "When my children get ill, or my husband or I, 
then I go buy one package. If it's not over after that, then it's probably 
more serious and we need to go to the doctor."

The products will be removed from grocery aisles and put behind pharmacy 
counters. Hy-Vee spokeswoman Ruth Mitchell said that at 24-hour stores, the 
products won't be available after the pharmacist goes home. Stores without 
pharmacies will keep medicines in the customer service department.

The policy targets Sudafed tablets, Dimetapp Extentabs, Dibromm Extended 
Release tablets, Drixoral 12-hour Cold Tablets and store-brand Suphedrine 
tablets in pill, tablet and capsule forms of 30 milligrams or more.

Narcotics officers say meth "cooks" extract ephedrine from the remedies to 
make the highly addictive stimulant. Authorities say they have come across 
the Hy-Vee brand at meth "labs."

"Any step that can slow it down is a positive step," Des Moines Police 
Capt. David Lillard said. "It can't do anything but help."

Ron Pearson, chairman of Hy-Vee Inc., said company officials have worked 
closely with law enforcement authorities and drug policy experts to prevent 
theft and help identify people who buy suspiciously large amounts of 
pseudoephedrine products. But with meth use continuing to escalate in the 
Midwest, he said, the tougher restrictions are necessary.

"Meth is a scourge that destroys our lives," Pearson said. "We have to stop 
it at the point of manufacture."

Meth drove about 5,300 Iowans into drug treatment in 2002, up 43 percent 
from only five years earlier. Meth is the top agenda item for law 
enforcement officials, which is why Marvin Van Haaften, director of the 
Office of Drug Control Policy, has called for pseudoephedrine to be 
classified at a higher level of controlled substance. If lawmakers approve, 
all Iowans would have to show identification and sign their names to buy 
common cold or allergy medicines that contain it.

But legislative leaders have said they are more likely to approve limits on 
how many packages can be bought, rather than restrict pseudoephedrine sales 
to pharmacies.

Van Haaften applauded Hy-Vee's initiative. He called it "a positive start" 
but added that "more needs to be done."

David Sinnwell, president of Dahl's Food Marts, said his company has a 
two-package customer limit for pseudoephedrine, and "in all cases, a 
customer needs assistance to purchase them."

"We've done this earlier in some stores where pilferage was a big problem," 
he said.

Eventually the policy stretched to all 11 Des Moines-area stores. Dahl's, 
however, does not require customers to sign for the products.

Shannon Erickson, pharmacist at Medicap Pharmacy in Pleasant Hill, said the 
store monitors sales but does not require a signature for pseudoephedrine 
products.

Medicap has 19 outlets in central Iowa.

"We know our customers pretty well," Erickson said.

The store keeps small boxes on hand, and typically allows customers to buy 
one box.

Nathan Beattie, 18, a Grand View College student and Hy-Vee shopper, called 
any effort to curb pseudoephedrine sales "a good idea."

"I think it's good they are taking it off the shelves, so it helps keep 
meth off the streets," he said.

Meth Measure

*Hy-Vee and Drug Town stores will move certain cold medicines behind 
pharmacy counters.

* Customers will be limited to two boxes of medicine per visit.

*Each purchase will be recorded, with the customer's name.

*The policy applies to 14 products that contain 30 milligrams or more of 
pseudoephedrine, a common decongestant.

*The policy targets Sudafed tablets, Dimetapp Extentabs, Dibromm Extended 
Release tablets, Drixoral 12-hour Cold Tablets and others.

Iowans' Views

52 percent have heard that medicine containing pseudoephedrine is used to 
make meth.

50 percent consider it to be a major problem.

79 percent would strongly or moderately support rules that require a 
pharmacist or clerk to monitor purchases of products with pseudoephedrine.

79 percent would strongly or moderately support a requirement for customers 
to show identification to purchase the products.

82 percent would strongly or moderately support a limit on how many 
products with pseudoephedrine could be purchased at one time.

*Survey conducted by the University of Northern Iowa's Center for Social 
and Behavioral Research

Limits In Place

ARIZONA: Eight packages.

ARKANSAS: Three packages.

CALIFORNIA: Three packages.

MISSOURI: Two-package limit if it is sole active ingredient; three packages 
otherwise.

NORTH DAKOTA: Two packages.

OREGON: Three packages.

WASHINGTON: Three packages.

HAZLETON: The eastern Iowa town of 950 requires stores to monitor the sale 
of cold medicine, engine-starter fluid and other products used to make meth.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman