Pubdate: Sat, 15 Apr 2006 Source: Island Packet (SC) Copyright: 2006, The Island Packet Contact: http://www.islandpacket.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1514 Author: Lori Yount, The Beaufort Gazette Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) PHARMACISTS PREPARE TO MOVE DRUG BEHIND COUNTER New regulations aimed at curbing production of methamphetamine For allergy and cold sufferers this spring, finding relief in a popular nasal decongestant might not be as easy as heading down an aisle at the local pharmacy, as the television ad for Sudafed suggests. With new federal guidelines that took effect last week and a bill restricting the sales of pseudoephedrine, the active ingredient in Sudafed, on its way through the state legislature, local pharmacies are stocking this over-the-counter drug behind their counters. They also are limiting the amount one person can purchase -- if they hadn't already. The regulations are all in an effort to reduce and deter the production of methamphetamine, a highly addictive stimulant drug concocted with relatively inexpensive household items that has plagued communities in the Midwest and worked its way into the Upstate of South Carolina. The new federal law that took effect April 8 requires all sellers of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine products to limit the daily sale of those products to one person to 3.6 grams, or 120 tablets, and 9 grams monthly. All nonliquid forms must be sold in blister packs. Nationally, pseudoephedrine sellers must place the products behind the counter or in a locked case and maintain a written logbook of the product sold and to whom starting Sept. 30. Customers must present photo identification to buy the drug. Some local pharmacies have sold the products from behind the counter for months as part of an educational effort by the South Carolina Pharmacy Association. "We support the goal -- to impede the use of the product for illegal purposes," said Jim Bracewell, the association's executive vice president. Logbooks will add more paperwork, he said, but his association is working with lawmakers to minimize extra work. To limit the amount each person purchases, corporate pharmacies have programmed their cash registers not to allow sale of more than 3.6 grams or two pseudoephedrine products per transaction, Walgreens and Bi-Lo spokespeople said. However, without the logbooks in place in South Carolina, it'll be difficult to ensure that no one buys more than 9 grams each month, they said. State Involvement A state bill requiring pseudoephedrine products to be sold behind counters and logbooks to be kept is poised to make its way to the governor's desk. The limits placed on purchases are unclear, but if passed, the state law will supersede federal law if it's stricter, Bracewell said. A state law will allow local law enforcement to keep tabs on the pharmacies and their logbooks, instead of understaffed federal agencies trying to enforce the laws alone, said Jeff Moore, executive director of the S.C. Sheriffs' Association. He said similar laws, such as one in Georgia, have reduced discoveries of methamphetamine manufacturing labs. By being behind counters, pseudoephedrine products are "not going to be available for theft, which will cut out a lot of the manufacturing," he said. "If you're willing to buy it, you have to sign that log. We're hoping to have that to act as a deterrent." Pseudoephedrine is a necessary ingredient in the two fastest and cheapest methods to produce methamphetamine, said Sgt. Renita Berry, chemist at Beaufort County's drug-analysis lab. She said she's seen very few cases of methamphetamine in Beaufort County. The new laws won't necessarily prevent "pharmacy hopping," Berry said, but she hopes a computerized database will be kept to help keep track of pseudoephedrine buyers. The state bill doesn't require databases, but Moore said he thinks larger chain pharmacies might keep their own. Government officials are considering eliminating the sale of pseudoephedrine products from small, independent pharmacies and stores altogether, he said. Mike Davis, owner of Ridgeland Main Street Pharmacy, said he doesn't keep his pseudoephedrine products behind the counter and knows his clientele well enough to trust they aren't buying to fuel methamphetamine labs. He does refuse to order the large boxes of the drug. If it comes down to keeping logbooks, Davis said he probably wouldn't sell the products anymore because he's phasing out Sudafed's pseudoephedrine products with its substitute product that contains the active ingredient phenylephrine. According to Sudafed's Web site, phenylephrine can't be used to make methamphetamine and provides the same "maximum-strength non-drowsy relief." Davis said so far he hasn't heard complaints from customers about its effectiveness. He even uses it for his own sinus trouble. "I don't see much difference in the two," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake