Pubdate: Sun, 22 Feb 2004 Source: Halifax Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2004 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 IN OXY PIT DRUG TRAFFICKERS will try anything to get past this country's defences. We've all heard of human "mules" swallowing cocaine-filled condoms to elude Customs or of shipping containers arriving on our shores packed with drugs hidden in hollowed-out food items. Addicts, too, will try just about anything to get their fixes. And these days, it's not just illegal narcotics they're looking to score, but prescription drugs. Last year, a Glace Bay woman was sentenced to two years in jail for holding up a drugstore - albeit apologetically - with a knife. She didn't walk out of the pharmacy with a bag full of cash, but a garbage bag full of OxyContin, the painkiller she was hooked on. Other addicts and their suppliers are more creative - and sinister. As The Sunday Herald reported last June, they monitor the obituaries section of the newspaper and break into the homes of deceased cancer patients while their families are attending the funeral. Then the burglars rifle through the house looking for leftover painkillers like OxyContin, which they can use or sell, for up to $80 a pill on the street. Prescription drug abuse is a growing scourge in many communities. It is a catalyst for despicable crimes, in which the ailing, the elderly and the vulnerable often become prime targets. It is a tragedy, too, for addicts and their families. This past week in Cape Breton, the deaths of three men - - two of them brothers - were linked to prescription drug abuse. So, what are we doing about it? Many pharmacists have locked away sought-after painkillers under lock and key, and keep only a day's supply on hand. But physicians are the ones who can really turn off the tap. Police believe the majority of OxyContin that ends up on the street comes from legitimate prescriptions, and they have criticized doctors for liberally dispensing such drugs. Some patients sell the pills they don't immediately need on the black market for a handsome profit. A Newfoundland and Labrador task force looking into OxyContin abuse in that province echoes similar concerns about overprescribing in its interim report this month. "Initial data gathered by the task force indicates that the quantity of OxyContin tablets prescribed and dispensed in this province has increased by 400 per cent from 2000 to 2003. This rapid growth is not unlike any other provinces in Canada, however, Newfoundland and Labrador is showing an increasing trend in the prescriptions for higher strengths." The report does note that the medical profession's philosophy of pain management has changed with the advent of better pain-relief drugs that have fewer of the drawbacks associated with traditional narcotics. Obviously, there are some legitimate reasons for the spike in prescriptions, and blaming irresponsible doctors is far too simplistic. One cannot lose sight of the fact most patients who get these drugs need them - and some who live in rural areas need them in larger quantities because it's impractical for them to return to the drugstore every week. One should be wary of conducting witchhunts of doctors - as has happened in the U.S. - based on the volume of painkillers they prescribe. Far more useful is the province's prescription monitoring program, which aims to root out double-doctoring - the practice of patients visiting several physicians so they can acquire multiple prescriptions. Right now, the province relies on a mail-in system to spot repeat offenders, but the lag time is two weeks. Computerization of the service would give doctors crucial information in real time. Encouragingly, Premier John Hamm seems open to this idea. The Newfoundland task force, whose final report is expected March 31, also recommends tamper-resistant prescription pads for narcotics, plus a major push to educate youth, doctors and pharmacists about OxyContin abuse. There is little point in Nova Scotia setting up its own task force - as Cape Breton Regional Police Chief Edgar MacLeod suggests - when it is likely to arrive at the same basic conclusion as Newfoundland's. We could save ourselves time, money and grief by following through on their recommendations posthaste. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman