Pubdate: Sat, 09 Apr 2005 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2005 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Charlie Chapple Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) NEW PAIN CLINICS IN TAMMANY ON HOLD Moratorium Set As Strategy Is Weighed The St. Tammany Parish Council, at the urging of local law enforcement officials, has imposed an emergency ban on issuing permits for pain management clinics. The moratorium "will give us a break" while authorities come up with a plan to combat what critics say is an underground industry that recklessly distributes prescription drugs, Capt. David Hall of the Sheriff's Office said Thursday night as the council adopted the ban for the parish's unincorporated areas. The 30-day ban prohibits all parish departments and agencies from issuing building, occupancy or occupational permits "for any pain management center or clinic whose primary focus or concentration is the prescribing and/or dispensing of pain medication." The council also introduced an ordinance to extend the ban for another six months. The extension is expected to be adopted at the council's May 5 meeting, council members said. The action is similar to measures taken last month by the Slidell City Council and the St. Bernard Parish Council. Hall, who heads the narcotics division of the Sheriff's Office, said pain clinics "are nothing more than pill mills" that dish out prescription pain killers and tranquilizers to anyone with the cash to buy them. "Carloads of people show up with cash to buy pills," Hall said. The result has been a dramatic increase in overdoses and deaths from prescription painkillers, Hall said. According to St. Tammany Parish Coroner Peter Galvan, the number of overdose deaths from prescription medicines in the parish nearly doubled from 29 in 2001 to 56 last year. Prescription pills also are sometimes sold by their purchasers on the street for huge profits, Hall said. "They're taking $240 of pills and turning it into $1,400," he said. Hall said the parish's No. 1 drug problem had been crack cocaine. But during the last quarter of the 2004, local narcotics agents seized more in prescription medicines than crack cocaine, he said. He said local authorities "are in the process of taking several actions" to fight the problem. Hall couldn't divulge details, but he said the ban will help authorities keep the problem from proliferating as they prepare to take those actions. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek