Pubdate: Thu, 16 Jun 2005 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2005 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: Associated Press, The Star's Kamara Jones and Patrice Holderbach contributed to this report. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) BLUNT SIGNS ANTI-METH BILLS JEFFERSON CITY - Missourians with colds and hay fever have 30 days to stock up before it becomes harder to buy Sudafed and other medicines to relieve their suffering. Gov. Matt Blunt signed legislation Wednesday to require tablets that contain ephedrine and pseudoephedrine ? used to make methamphetamine ? be kept behind a counter and sold only by pharmacists and pharmacy technicians. "These bills will keep the key ingredients needed to make meth . out of the hands of drug manufacturers and, by so doing, will put them out of business," Blunt said in a statement. The new law, effective in 30 days, is contained in two bills Blunt signed Wednesday in ceremonies in Kirksville, Hannibal, Jackson, Springfield and Joplin. Missouri's new law also: ¦ Requires customers buying pseudoephedrine products to be at least 18. ¦ Says customers must provide photo identification to a pharmacist. ¦ Requires pharmacists to keep a log of customers buying such products and that it be available for inspection by law enforcement officials. ¦ Limits purchases of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine tablets to no more than nine grams a month, or 300 tablets. A typical box contains 24 tablets, so the law still allows customers to buy plenty of medicine. Violation of the law is a misdemeanor. At least 16 other states, including Kansas, have passed similar laws restricting the sale of pseudoephedrine products after Oklahoma last passed a law officials there say has dramatically curtailed meth production. Several bills have been introduced in Congress to enact a similar law. Missouri has led the nation in meth lab seizures for the last several years. According to the Missouri Highway Patrol, there were 2,788 meth labs seized in 2004. A 2003 law in Missouri required products with pseudoephedrine or ephedrine to be placed behind the checkout counter or close to it. To comply with the newest law, Ron Fitzwater, chief executive officer of the Missouri Pharmacy Association, said pharmacies across the state were preparing to move pseudoephedrine and ephedrine tablets behind the pharmacy counter. Many pharmacies already have placed cold medications behind the counter, he said. But the bigger job for pharmacies is to determine whether they will keep paper or electronic logs of purchases. "Obviously, they realize it's going to be a little bit more of a burden, but we've seen the abuses of these products," Fitzwater said. The new restrictions do not apply to liquid medications with pseudoephedrine or ephedrine, or to liquid-filled gel capsules, which are more difficult to use in making meth. That exception was important to retailer groups like the Missouri Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Association. Ron Leone, the organization's executive director, said convenience stores were "the only game in town" for much of rural Missouri and for those who needed medicine in the middle of the night. "I think since we crafted a solution (to exempt liquids and gel capsules), we're OK with it," he said. Waiting for a prescription at a CVS Pharmacy in Kansas City, North, Ruth Stewart described the new restrictions as "a pain in the rear end." Yet Stewart said while "inconvenient for the customers," the new law would be worthwhile if it deterred meth production. The new law, in addition to requiring photo identification to buy some cold medicines, also might mean customers have to make two purchases on the same trip. Sue Prast, a pharmacist at a Hy-Vee in Kansas City, North, said customers buying products such as Sudafed with other items must make two transactions ? one at the pharmacy counter and the other at the front of the store for all other purchases. Throughout the pharmacy, signs alert Sudafed buyers the product is available behind the counter only as part of the "effort to reduce the manufacturing of illegal drugs in our community." Drug manufacturers also are responding to anti-meth law by altering products. Prast said shipments of Vicks NyQuil have been on hold because the manufacturer has begun replacing pseudoephedrine with phenylephrine, which is not used in meth production. Prast said she expected more drug makers to also reformulate. "If there's anything you want to buy," Prast said, "buy it now because it's either going to be off the market or changed to something different." Though the new law limits the amount of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine products that can be bought and requires pharmacists to keep a log of those buying the products, it does not require that the logs be turned in to law enforcement agencies. It also does not require that police agencies regularly inspect the logs or share information with other law enforcement agencies. Rick Hayslett, owner of the Grandview Medicine Shoppe, said a centralized computer system was needed to track those who might abuse the law by traveling to several different pharmacies, instead of loading up on medicines at one location. "It's another regulation, but I think it's good," Hayslett said. Outside the Medicine Shoppe, Barbara Willoughby said methamphetamine was starting to become a problem in her hometown of Adrian, Mo. "I think it's a good idea, to keep this . off the street," Willoughby said. "I have children that age who don't always make the best decisions." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin