Pubdate: Sat, 30 Jul 2005 Source: News & Observer (Raleigh, NC) Copyright: 2005 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: https://miva.nando.com/contact_us/letter_editor.html Website: http://www.news-observer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Author: Tim Whitmire, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) PLAN TO EASE DRUG RULES STIRS FEAR Prescription Fraud Will Rise, Some Say MURPHY -- A General Assembly plan to loosen limits on Medicaid prescriptions worries Western North Carolina officials who fear it will worsen existing problems with drug fraud. "The Medicaid program needs changes, but this one is not one of them and will not help our clients' health and safety or help us spend our citizens' tax dollars wisely," Lisa Davis, director of the Cherokee County Department of Social Services, said this week. Legislators working on a final state budget are considering proposals to raise the number of prescriptions a Medicaid patient could get filled each month. Existing law limits them to six a month unless a doctor overrides the cap. One plan would raise that limit to eight; another would allow an unlimited number of generic-drug prescriptions. Proponents say the current cap is too restrictive because of the number of ailments treated with multiple drugs. Lawmakers are working with the Department of Health and Human Services to set the new rule, which would go into place when the budget is approved. Change likely Prescription drug companies are involved in the legislative discussions and a change in the rule is considered very likely. But in Cherokee County, Davis and others say such a change would make it even harder to crack down on Medicaid patients who "doctor shop," visiting multiple doctors for overlapping prescriptions for popular painkillers such as OxyContin and methadone, then resell the drugs. Any increase in the number of prescriptions Medicaid patients may obtain without scrutiny invites continued problems, Davis said. She and her colleagues at DSS already blame prescription drug fraud in part for her county's exploding Medicaid budget. Medicines cost the county $5.3 million, or 22 percent of its Medicaid budget, in 1999-2000. By 2003-2004, that figure nearly doubled to $10.4 million, or 31 percent of the budget. Last budget year, it was up again -- to $12.2 million. Also, two prescription painkillers -- the narcotic OxyContin and methadone, a cheaper generic drug best known for its use in people suffering from opiate withdrawal symptoms -- have contributed to much of the drug problem in the state's western mountains since the late 1990s. Cherokee County Sheriff Keith Lovin blames the prevalence of prescription painkillers for more than a dozen overdose deaths in his county since he took office in late 2002. Dealers and drug users cheat the system by doctor shopping and filling prescriptions at different pharmacies, Lovin and other law enforcement officers say. They might use Medicaid to obtain one prescription at a government-subsidized cost and pay cash for a second OxyContin prescription. "You keep one, you sell one," said Tom Frye, a retired State Bureau of Investigation agent who commands a multi-agency drug task force from Cherokee and Clay counties. Records seized This week, FBI agents seized records at two medical clinics and two pharmacies in the western communities of Swannanoa and Franklin. Rick Schwein, the resident agent in charge of the FBI's Asheville office, said the searches were part of an ongoing criminal investigation, but declined to describe the probe. Lovin and Frye say they think they could do a better job fighting prescription drugs if they were allowed to find out who gets multiple prescriptions filled and who doctor shops. Under state law, only the SBI and the federal Drug Enforcement Administration have access to prescription records for the purpose of enforcing controlled substances, said Noelle Talley, spokeswoman for the state Department of Justice. Local requests for prescription records go through the SBI, which typically offers to open a case and work with local investigators on it, Talley said. But Frye said requests to check out individuals frequently meet with significant delays. "They're good to work with, but the SBI's diversion unit -- the unit that deals with prescription drug fraud -- only has about 13 agents and I believe is based out of Greensboro, which is a long way from here," Lovin said. Talley said any change to existing law would have to go through the legislature. Meanwhile, HHS spokeswoman Debbie Crane said this week that a recently created Medicaid fraud unit in the department will scrutinize the prescription patterns of doctors and dentists, looking for people who prescribe unnecessary medication. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin