Pubdate: Tue, 24 May 2005 Source: Metrowest Daily News (MA) Copyright: 2005 MetroWest Daily News Contact: http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/619 Author: Peter Reuell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) NO LACK OF IDEAS IN DEALING WITH OXYCONTIN ISSUE Better education, both for patients and doctors. Abuse-resistant drugs. Electronic tracking of prescriptions. Pumping more money into programs to treat addicts. Even random drug tests. Members of the Massachusetts House of Representatives OxyContin Commission heard all these ideas and more in a nearly three-hour hearing yesterday on prescription drug abuse, particularly of OxyContin. "This is not someone else's problem, this is everyone's problem," commission co-Chairman Rep. Peter Koutoujian, D-Waltham, said at the hearing's outset. "We all tend to think in terms of OxyContin, but there are a lot of prescription drugs we need to be concerned about." The greatest weapon against abuse is one doctors, pharmacists, legislators and even patients already possess -- information -- according to Steve Grossman, owner of Brookline-based J.E. Pierce Apothecary Inc. Although the state already has a program in place to monitor prescriptions for powerful drugs like OxyContin, Grossman said he has never been warned about filling a prescription for a patient, or about over-prescribing by a doctor. "It's the dissemination of that information that's so critical," he said. "But if I don't know if (someone) is coming up in your computer as questionable, I'm going to assume he's good." Meanwhile, Grossman said, laws designed to protect patients, like the Health Insurance Portability Act, are making it tougher for pharmacists and doctors to spot abusers. When it comes to educating the public about the dangers of prescription drug abuse, the earlier the better, said officials like Framingham Superintendent Christopher Martes said. Framingham schools were recently awarded a $200,000 grant by the MetroWest Healthcare Foundation to beef up drug education, particularly in middle school. The use and abuse of prescription drugs such as OxyContin will be a key part of that program, Martes said. Although the drug so far has not been a problem in Framingham schools, "we need to be diligent (and) we need to continue to reach out to parents so they understand we're a resource," Martes said. The Framingham grant was part of a larger $1 million program that will cover five MetroWest communities, Foundation CEO Martin Cohen said. "We clearly need to be concerned about OxyContin," he said. The handful of chronic pain sufferers who, like Don Freeman, rely on the drug to ensure their quality of life, urged the commission to keep the drug available to those who use it as intended. "There is a tremendous stigma attached to being a chronic pain patient," said Freeman, who has used the drug for more than a decade to manage his pain. "I appreciate that the abuse of OxyContin is a problem, but there are people...like me that are normal people." As long as the drug is available, though, there will be some who abuse it. To treat those who do, John Sannicandro, a counselor with the South Middlesex Opportunity Council, the state must provide more funding for drug-abuse services like the now-defunct Framingham detox center. Studies have shown that as many as 20 percent of teens take some sort of legally prescribed medication, Sannicandro said. "That creates a culture, I think, that's very dangerous," he said. "The perception in many people is pill-taking is OK. "Unless you make that connection with a kid, showing them that, yes, this does happen to you...unless there is some kind of follow-up, it's a slap on the wrist. Unless it's personal, it's meaningless." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth