Pubdate: Sat, 01 May 2004 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2004 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Mark Hollis, Tallahassee Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/prescription+drug+abuse Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/states/fl/ (Florida) DRUG DATABASE BILL FAILS TO GET SUPPORT TALLAHASSEE - Worries about patient privacy drove Florida legislators Friday to block passage of a bill calling for a government-run prescription drug database. But legislators agreed, in a separate bill, to give state health officials more powers to fight prescription drug abuse and Medicaid fraud. The Florida House sent to Gov. Jeb Bush Senate Bill 1064 giving the Agency for Health Care Administration new authority to get more data about medical diagnoses before authorizing Medicaid payments. The measure gives the state the ability to remove doctors from the government insurance program if the physicians are found to be prescribing inappropriate amounts of medicine. Anyone convicted of defrauding Medicaid also could be denied benefits for a year or longer. The wide-ranging measure stems from the work of a select subcommittee that was set up in response to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel series "Drugging the Poor." The series found that fewer than 3 percent of the state's medical professionals prescribed more than two-thirds of the narcotics and other dangerous drugs, and that some of these doctors had multiple patients die from pill overdoses. Bush praised legislators for passing the bill, but called legislators' rejection of the drug database plan (HB 397) "a big disappointment," saying that the Legislature missed an opportunity to create a powerful tool for stopping drug overdoses. The database proposal is a response to 3,324 prescription-drug overdose deaths in Florida last year, as well as investigations by the Orlando Sentinel and the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. The system would allow doctors, designated medical assistants and pharmacists to look up online the pharmacy records of patients age 17 and older to ensure they haven't been shopping around for multiple prescriptions. The records monitored would include potentially addictive drugs, such as Xanax, Valium and the painkiller OxyContin. The House debated the drug database but failed to bring it up for a vote. Only a few legislators spoke in favor of it, but both Democrats and Republicans said they were opposed. "This goes far in violation of [constitutionally protected] liberties," said Rep. Dan Gelber, D-Miami Beach. "It has some advantages, but we'd have to accept some other deprivations of liberty that I don't think we should tolerate." "If that's not big brother, I don't know what is," added Rep. Rene Garcia, R-Miami. "My parents fled a communist country; government should not be in our everyday lives. Government is not the answer." Bush allies in the House said legislators didn't realize the limitations that would be placed on accessing the prescription data. "It's a shame that people really didn't look at all the protections for privacy that we put into the bill," said Rep. Gayle Harrell, the chief House sponsor of the legislation. "I'm not going to bring it up for consideration. I'm pretty sure I just wouldn't have the votes." To help make the legislation more palatable to legislators, Purdue Pharma Inc., the manufacturer of OxyContin, had agreed to negotiate with the state over paying the costs for the database. Analysts say it will cost about $2 million to develop and about $2.8 million a year to run. "We've made a big financial mistake," Harrell said. "We're losing all that money from Purdue Pharma." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake