Pubdate: Tue, 28 Jun 2005 Source: USA Today (US) Copyright: 2005 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc Contact: http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/index.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/466 Author: Donna Leinwand, USA TODAY Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) DRUGMAKERS TAKE ACTION TO FOIL METH COOKS Makers of cold medicine are reformulating their products to make it nearly impossible to convert them into illegal methamphetamine in the crude home labs that have sprung up across the USA. For years, meth addicts have purchased large quantities of over-the-counter decongestants, such as Sudafed, that contain pseudoephedrine. Pseudoephedrine can be cooked with household products into methamphetamine, a highly addictive illegal stimulant. In response, many states have passed laws that make it more difficult to purchase the medicine. Some now require people who purchase it to show identification and register in a ledger. Others require drugstores to place the medicine behind the pharmacy counter. Moving behind the counter At least 44 states have passed or are considering legislation to restrict products that contain pseudoephedrine. In addition, the U.S. Senate is considering legislation that would impose strict standards on products made with pseudoephedrine. The bill proposes placing the products behind the counter, requiring customers to show identification and sign a log book, and limiting how much can be sold at a time. "We think this federal legislation will pass, and even if it doesn't, there's a patchwork of state legislation," says Sen. Jim Talent, R-Mo., who co-sponsored the federal legislation. "More and more, pseudoephedrine products are going to go behind the counter." To provide over-the-counter cough, cold and allergy products, companies such as pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and generics manufacturer Leiner Health Products are adding new lines of decongestants that use phenylephrine instead of pseudoephedrine. Phenylephrine, a medicine that has been on the market for years in such products as Alka-Seltzer cold medicine, works similarly to pseudoephedrine and is approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Pfizer introduced a decongestant-only phenylephrine product, Sudafed PE, in January and will begin rolling out other products next month that contain phenylephrine with other ingredients, Pfizer spokesman Jay Kosminsky says. A full line is expected by January, he says. Pfizer will continue to manufacture Sudafed and other products with pseudoephedrine, but they will be subject to state restrictions. Leiner, which supplies generic over-the-counter drugs to large retailers such as Costco, Walgreens and Wal-Mart, began shipping its new products to stores this month and will have a full line of 17 alternatives to pseudoephedrine medicine by spring, spokeswoman Crystal Wright says. "The whole issue here has been getting the right balance," Kosminsky says. "We want to keep it out of the hands of criminals but make it available to consumers." Pfizer has been working for several years to create a pseudoephedrine medicine that couldn't be used to make meth, Kosminsky says. The company's researchers came up with one product, but scientists and the Drug Enforcement Administration said that it wasn't foolproof. "Eventually, the criminals find their way around it," Kosminsky says. "We would just be staying one step ahead of them. We wanted a more permanent solution." Shutting down home labs Information Resources Inc., a market research company, estimates that sales in 2004 of over-the-counter cough, allergy, sinus and flu products totaled $3.2 billion. More than half of those sales, about $1.7 billion, came from products containing pseudoephedrine. The numbers do not include sales from Wal-Mart or retail clubs. The research company found that sales of pseudoephedrine products in Oklahoma, the first state to impose restrictions, declined 16% in the year after sales were restricted. Although two-thirds of the meth in the nation is imported from "super labs" operating in Mexico, meth labs are a problem, particularly in the Midwest. Last year, law enforcement shut down about 9,725 labs nationwide, according to the National Clandestine Laboratory Seizure System, which collects data from state police agencies. Missouri, Tennessee and Arkansas led the nation in shutdowns. The home labs pose environmental, fire and social hazards for local communities, DEA Special Agent Mike Heald says. He says the new chemical formulations will create an obstacle for home cooks. "If there were no pseudoephedrine, you would see a dramatic drop in small meth labs," Heald says. "With pseudoephedrine, it's very simple to do with common household chemicals. "There's no real chemistry involved. It's like baking a cake." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin