Pubdate: Sun, 30 Jan 2005 Source: Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal (MS) Copyright: 2005 Journal Publishing Company Contact: http://www.djournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/823 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CRYSTAL METH LAWS Gov. Haley Barbour's timely State of the State proposal to crack down on crystal methamphetamine labs in Mississippi found a sympathetic audience in the Legislature, and tough countermeasures seem certain. Several anti-crystal-meth bills remain alive in the session, and it doesn't matter who authors and sponsors the one finally adopted so long as it has the right new restrictions. The key in the issue is controlling access and abuse of pseudoephedrine, the chemical that's essential in making crystal meth, an illegal drug that's dangerous, deadly, addictive and ubiquitous. Barbour's idea is the right one: Put the over-the-counter medicines containing the most pseudoephedrine (that's Sudafed and some generic spin-offs) behind the counter, limit quantities, and dispense only by pharmacists. The medicine wouldn't require a prescription, but its availability as a mass-purchase product virtually would be eliminated. Eliminate pseudoephedrine's easy availability and you'll eliminate much of crystal meth's production. Minor problems It's arguable that moving Sudafed and its generic competitors behind the counter would create a little more work, and it might be a minor inconvenience for shoppers. Still, the positives outweigh the negatives. The argument that people in rural areas won't be able to get the medications after pharmacies close won't fly far. Many Wal-Marts and other "big box" stores in small towns have drug stores with extended hours. Anyway, most people don't go looking for Sudafed in the middle of the night regardless of where it's sold. No big quantities Stiff control would prevent big-quantity purchases, possible now only where pseudoephedrine is shelved in quantity. The other meds with pseudoephedrine don't matter. As Tupelo pharmacist Jim Bain commented, "The key is controlling pseudoephedrine. The drugs with it mixed up with a lot of other stuff would require a lot better chemist than anyone I know to separate it." Barbour's plan and its spinoffs are based on an Oklahoma law that's reduced meth lab seizures in that state by 80 percent. Impressive. There's no shame in copycatting when somebody else's idea can be applied with good effect in our state. Crystal met is big illegal drug and crime problem, and we have a priime opportunity to do something about it. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek