Pubdate: Fri, 18 Mar 2005 Source: Bowling Green Daily News (KY) Copyright: 2005 News Publishing LLC Contact: http://www.bgdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1218 Author: Greg Wells Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Note: The Associated Press contributed information for this story. RX TRACKING PLAN FUNDED Changes to old system designed to stop abuse, but some are skeptical The legislature has funded improvements to a statewide system that tracks prescriptions. And though generally praised by doctors and law enforcement officials, some still have questions about the system going to the Internet. Under the old system, dubbed KASPER -- Kentucky All Schedule Prescription Electronic Reporting -- pharmacists and doctors would fax requests for information to the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, which often took hours to fax back responses. The system is designed to allow doctors, pharmacists and police to access prescription records to stop drug abuse and improve health care. The new program allows medical personnel and police to search for information online so they can get answers at any time. Verlon Pierce, owner and pharmacist at Medicine Arts Pharmacy, said he was concerned that the information would not be secure enough on the Internet, but the provision of the law that most concerns him actually involves secrecy. "The law says that the patient and patient's attorney have no access to the KASPER report," Pierce said. "It is kind of like a credit report that everybody but you can get." He said he is concerned that some errors could get into the system and a patient wouldn't have any way of knowing it and that there are real concerns about the basic security of the data. "I got a letter from the (federal) Department of Justice the other day," Pierce said. "It said that the only way to keep kids from getting prescription drugs over the Internet is to limit their access. If we can't keep kids from ordering drugs off the Internet, then how do we keep the bad guys from getting your information from KASPER?" Civil libertarians and other health experts are concerned about the privacy of the system and question whether it will end up discouraging doctors from writing necessary prescriptions. Dr. Bob Esterhay of the University of Louisville School of Public Health said the availability of the information is both helpful and a cause for concern. While medical personnel can get useful data and drug abuse can be interrupted, Esterhay wondered whether doctors might somehow be dissuaded from writing some prescriptions for needy patients, knowing they may be scrutinized. And as an individual, Esterhay said he wondered about all that personal information available to so many people. "There are always issues in terms of an individual's privacy," Esterhay said. Dave Sallengs, one of the officials who oversees the day-to-day workings of the KASPER system, said the new system will have higher security than what is used by banks. He added that of the 500 to 600 requests a day his office receives most, 87 percent are from physicians who are trying to make sure their patients are not taking drugs the physician is unaware of. "Most of the interventions are at the doctor level," Sallengs said. "And that is preventing some of these people from developing a problem with prescription drugs." Law enforcement officers and pharmacists make up most of the rest of the requests, but there is another group that has the power to ask for reports - -- the licensing bodies for physicians and pharmacists. For more than five years, Kentucky has tracked prescriptions for certain drugs, from the extremely powerful, addictive and often abused narcotics like OxyContin to cough medicines with codeine. Bowling Green physician John Gover, in internal medicine practice here for 19 years, said the KASPER system is a great thing for Kentucky and having computerized access is going to be even better. He said he just wishes a regional or nationwide system like it was available. "The use and abuse of medications is going to be an ongoing problem and requires the physician to be vigilant," Gover said. "We use it all the time. It is very good for making sure that patients aren't receiving prescriptions from other physicians." He said the increase in the number of patients who require long-term use of pain medication has necessitated a system that allows doctors to make sure that patients aren't getting those drugs from another doctor. "With a new patient, we use it just to make sure the person is on the up and up with you," Gover said. "People might mislead a health care provider about the prescriptions they are receiving." Then there is the other, less well known use of KASPER -- making sure doctors and pharmacists aren't misusing drugs themselves. Gover said he considers that another benefit of the program. He compared a drug-addicted person who has prescriptive authority as being similar to an alcoholic working at a liquor store. He said those people need to receive appropriate help and KASPER reports could help ensure that. Jeffrey L. Osman, pharmacy inspections and investigations coordinator with the state, said addiction is not a real common problem among Kentucky's pharmacists. On an annual basis, his office follows about 30 pharmacists in the commonwealth that are in their addiction recovery program. "We have a pharmacist recovery network for those who are suffering from addiction," Osman said. "They typically suspend the license -- put that person in drug treatment program and after they have fulfilled all the requirements, usually takes six months, they can ask for license back." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager