Pubdate: Tue, 30 Nov 2004 Source: Enterprise-Journal, The (MS) Copyright: 2004 The Enterprise-Journal Contact: http://www.enterprise-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/917 Author: Dave Parker, Enterprise-Journal PRESCRIPTION FOR A PROBLEM Addicts Finding Ways To Obtain Potent Pharmaceuticals It's as simple as changing the numbers on a prescription. Or stealing prescription drug pads from a doctor's office. The abuse of prescription medications is becoming more prevalent in Pike County and southwest Mississippi, according to local narcotics officials. To help fight prescription drug fraud, Purdue Pharma Technologies on Connecticut gave the city a $10,000 grant earlier this year. That money went to the McComb Police Department before finally winding up in the budget of the Southwest Mississippi Narcotics Enforcement Unit. McComb Police Chief Billie Hughes said the grant money was "something the city can't pass up. We don't have to have matching funds to go with it and it's an unlimited-use grant. And the company encourages us to use it that way ... to track prescription drug fraud." Prescription drugs come in many forms, from pills to liquids, and are grouped according to schedules by the Drug Enforcement Agency depending on its medicinal value, potential for abuse and dependency liability. For example, marijuana and heroin are considered Schedule I drugs with a high potential for abuse. Schedule II drugs include opiates such as hydrocodone, oxycodone and morphine. These drugs have a high potential for abuse, said local pharmacist Keith Guy. "OxyContin has gotten most of the publicity," Guy said at his office at Guy' s Innovative Medical Services. "It's gotten bad publicity, too, because people crush it and then snort it. It's a wonderful drug and one that works if it's used properly for pain management." Prescription drug fraud and abuse is a multibillion-dollar business, with oxycodone one of the most frequently abused drugs, according the Drug Enforcement Agency. Oxycodone, a controlled substance, is an active ingredient in over 20 prescription drugs, including OxyContin, according to the DEA Web site. OxyContin is the No. 1 prescribed narcotic medication for treating moderate-to-severe pain in the United States. A single 20-milligram OxyContin tablet legally selling for about $2 can be sold for as much as $25 on the illegal drug market. "It's no secret to how they get the pills either," said Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics Commander Mike Aldridge. "They have a legitimate prescription for drug X for 10 pills. They make the 1 a 4. Or they add a zero to 10 and try to get 100. We have pads that are stolen from doctors' offices and people write their own prescriptions. "When someone walks in with a prescription for 100 Loritab, that should be a red flag right there," he said. Aldridge and Guy recalled a past case where an individual in McComb was either "doctor shopping" or "pharmacy hopping." "We pulled the records from the pharmacy they'd been to," Aldridge said. "They were receiving 4,000-plus pills a month. They were abusing the drug and people build up a tolerance to them. They go to a doctor with a complaint of pain and (find ways) to get multiple prescriptions filled." Guy, whose career in pharmacy spans over 29 years, said earlier in his career he was the victim of a forged prescription. "I remember this lady came in with a prescription for diet pills," he said. "It looked kind of strange for some reason but I filled it. Later, I showed it to someone and they made a copy of the prescription." The county district attorney later showed up, Guy said, "and raked me over the coals. And I'm the one who showed it to them. But she was smart. Came in when I was extremely busy with customers." Aldridge said people often go to multiple doctors with the same complaint of pain and receive multiple prescriptions. "They know how to manifest pain," he said. "We've seen an increase in people reordering (prescription medications) from overseas over the Internet. We have people go to Mexico and they walk into a pharmacy and buy what they want and buy by the thousands. It's that easy." Locally, pharmacies and physicians' offices have also been burglarized to obtain the medications. "Doctors seem to be doing a better job of not leaving the examination room when they are treating a patient," Aldridge said. "Doctors are able to recognize people who are trying to doctor shop." Robert Byrd, an attorney in the Pike County District Attorney's office, handles many prescription drug fraud cases and estimates four to five cases a month go to a grand jury in the three-county area of Pike, Walthall and Lincoln. "It's hard to say," he said. "I'm sure other cases aren't even reported and we have others who are returning to court on multiple indictments. "But this problem is like everything else, where doctors may be more willing to prescribe medications at the request of the patient. Once a person becomes addicted to the drug, the doctor won't prescribe it any more and that person has to find a way to get it." Punishment for fraud has been handled like many other crimes though it varies. Less than a decade ago, Pike Circuit Court Judge Keith Starrett instituted a drug court to help those with addictions. There are currently 11 drug courts in Mississippi and five more are planned. Those found guilty don't usually serve jail time, but are placed on strict probation, said Byrd. A person's background, however, determines the severity of their punishment, he said. How should officials try to prevent drug fraud? Aldridge said creating a prescription data base could be a beginning. "I think that would prevent some of the doctor shopping that goes on," he said. "The information in the database would keep track on transactions. It would track if someone got a prescription filled in McComb then a day or two later gets one filled in Brookhaven or somewhere else." But Guy said privacy issues should be considered. Though he said prescription drug fraud is illegal - and dangerous - privacy issues should be a factor. Guy proposes a contract between a doctor, patient and pharmacist. Although he said he doubts it would be it could be made legally binding. "It is just a signature," he said. "But a contract like that could be used to manage the pain of a patient. "There needs to be some kind of documentation. Right now, we don't have adequate pain relief management in Pike County." What would be the terms of such a document? "Simple. I'm your doctor and I'm in charge of managing your pain. It could state that you can't go to another doctor or take any other prescribed medication. If you do, you're fired as my patient." Guy said he sees a national data bank as an infringement. "To me, that's a loss of freedom," he said. "Do you want people, anyone, to know (your medical history)?" "If every doctor had a computer and has access to your records, is that good or is that bad?" Drug Fraud Almost half the law enforcement agencies that responded to a 2000 National Drug Threat Survey listed prescription drug fraud as a problem in their jurisdiction. Successful offenders got caught less often, as with any other crime, and prescription drug fraud goes undetected in many cases because it's not a high priority for police. Prescription drug fraud also leads to other crimes, including Medicaid fraud, obtaining drugs illegally over the Internet and theft by pharmacy workers and health-care providers. Many experts attribute the growth in prescription drug abuse in part to the recent availability of OxyContin, an oral, form of oxycodone that acts for 12 hours. Prescribed by a doctor, OxyContin is an effective pain reliever. But crushed and snorted or mixed with water and injected, the drug delivers its power in one punch, producing a high similar to heroin. Sources: DEA and National Survey of Primary Care Physicians and Patients on Substance Abuse - --- MAP posted-by: Derek