Pubdate: Sun, 14 Oct 2007 Source: State, The (SC) Copyright: 2007 The State Contact: http://www.thestate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/426 Author: John Monk CRIMEFIGHTING - OR `BIG BROTHER'? The drug war in your medicine cabinet S.C. soon will start tracking prescription drugs by computer. Is this a blow against the black market or invasion of privacy? The hunt for black market pushers and users of prescription drugs such as OxyContin is going high tech. As early as January, a new computer at the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control will go online, linking the state's 1,225 independent and chain pharmacies. From then on, all pharmacies will upload to DHEC information on everyone in South Carolina who buys painkillers, tranquilizers or stimulants. This data includes the patient's name, date of birth, address, kind of medication, dosage and the prescribing doctor. Some say the new system smacks of =93Big Brother,=94 but law officers love it because it will save them time. =93With a few keystrokes, you can get the same information in 15 minutes versus 15 days,=94 said John Ozaluk, the Drug Enforcement Administration's chief in South Carolina. Currently, to check out a tip that someone is illegally buying drugs at pharmacies, agents often have to visit the store and inspect paper records, Ozaluk said. Agents still will have to investigate cases and prove them in court, he said. Many pill abusers -- it's unclear how many are out there =97 are =93docto r shoppers,=94 people who go from doctor to doctor, and pharmacy to pharmacy, illegally amassing drugs to use or sell. But pill abusers also include doctors, nurses and pharmacists who steal, divert or overprescribe drugs, either for their own use or to give to patients or friends. This year, prescription-drug misuse has prompted state regulators to discipline at least nine doctors, six pharmacists or pharmacy technicians and 58 nurses. Discplined nurses were almost always stealing drugs from hospital storage areas or medicines prescribed for hospital and nursing-home patients, records show. PRIVACY CONCERNS Law-enforcement officers are cheering the new system. =93It's about time,=94 said Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott. =93This is the forgotten drug war.=94 Currently, drug investigators get tips from a concerned relative, friend or health-care worker. Or police might find pills on someone they're arresting. Investigators then must visit each pharmacy to inspect records. Old-fashioned legwork, tips and snitches led to February's sentencing of Lila Jones, 75, of West Columbia. Known as the Pill Lady, she had for years sold prescription drugs in her neighborhood. She's now serving three years in federal prison. Beginning next year, DHEC's computer will show quickly if someone is pharmacy-hopping, filing prescriptions from different doctors. It also will show if a doctor or pharmacy is issuing unusual amounts of a drug. According to the DEA, no breach of confidentiality ever has occurred in programs similar to the one DHEC is setting up. But libertarians and people with privacy concerns worry that so much confidential data will be stored by one state agency. =93Centralizing those records electronically in one government agency creates too large a risk of unauthorized access to the deeply personal medical information of thousands of law-abiding South Carolina citizens,=94 wrote Gov. Mark Sanford in a June 2006 letter to the Legislature. That month, Sanford vetoed the bill that would have authorized the program. The Legislature overrode him. But he has supporters. =93It's Big Brother,=94 said Columbia defense attorney and former prosecutor Joe McCulloch. =93It's government continuing its ever-expanding appetite for the collection and organization of private material that a few years ago would have been unthinkable.=94 McCulloch said it would be better if investigators had to show =93probable cause=94 to a judge before accessing the information. Columbians had mixed thoughts on the matter when asked last week outside the CVS pharmacy on Assembly Street. =93It sounds like the positives probably outweigh the negatives -- especially if there haven't been security issues in other states that have it,=94 said Sarah Chakales, a USC senior majoring in broadcast journalism. But Tom Baldwin, a financial analyst with the S.C. Department of Insurance, said: =93I'm against it. I=92m kind of willing to give up some freedoms for national security. But this would be one area where I don't want it done.=94 He said the =93libertarian in me=94 doesn=92t want to give the state more personal information than necessary. SECURITY MEASURES Eventually, the people with access to the information will number in the thousands. Besides a small contingent of drug officers at DHEC and DEA, potential users of the system include the state's 4,313-plus pharmacists, the thousands of doctors who prescribe controlled drugs and the state's medical regulatory boards, according to the 2006 law. Doctors and pharmacists will be considered a new line of defense. Before they write or fill a prescription, they will be able to check that someone who appears to need a prescription doesn't already have one. =93Security measures will be in place, and access will be controlled,=94 Wilbur Harling, director of DHEC's drug-control bureau, wrote in an e-mail to The State. =93... If anyone has a question or concern, we will be happy to talk with them about it.=94 All users -- many of whom will access the system remotely, via the Internet -- must be registered and use passwords. Different kinds of users will have different levels of access. Audit trails will show any improper use, according to state documents. The software also will have spy-agency features. For example, it can detect people who use variations of their names -- Jim Jones, J. Jones, James Jones -- to camouflage their identities as they move from pharmacy to pharmacy. Investigators said they are aware of how sensitive the data are. =93Along with the responsibility of having access to that information comes the responsibility of maintaining the integrity of that information,=94 DEA's Ozaluk said. Anyone breaching confidentiality will be charged with a felony and subject to a $10,000 fine and 10 years in jail. Pharmacists, by law, must participate. =93If you knowingly fail to report, you are subject to a $2,000 fine,=94 Harling warned a gathering of pharmacists last month. Many pharmacists don't yet know much about the system. James Odom, a pharmacist at CVS' Assembly Street store near USC, said he was unaware. Lynn Connelly, who runs Medicine Mart on Sunset Boulevard in West Columbia, said he knows a little but needs details. DHEC said the agency has approved a training manual and expects to mail it to pharmacists by the end of the month. Overall, Connelly said, the changes are =93a good thing.=94 But he thinks the regulations impose extra duties without compensation. =93It's another classic case of the government asking us to do something else,=94 he said. FINDING THE CULPRITS No one knows how much prescription-drug trafficking goes on in South Carolina. The DEA said it makes about 20 cases a year, but they are usually larger, more complex cases, a spokesman said. DHEC said the agency's 13 controlled-drug investigators make 400 to 500 cases a year. =93We have arrested physicians, pharmacists, nurses, police officers. ... They run the gamut,=94 said spokesman Thom Berry. According to DHEC, the DEA and SLED, South Carolina's most-abused drugs include amphetamines, depressants such as Xanax and painkillers such as Vicodin, OxyContin and Percocet. Street prices per pill are mostly under $10, but a tab of Dilaudid, a strong narcotic, can sell in the $60 range. DHEC's computer will help target four major suspects: =93Doctor shoppers,=94 young people who steal pills from friends or relatives, health-care workers misusing drugs and =93pill mills=94 -- doctors or pharmacies improperly churning out prescriptions. Police may not be the new system's main users. =93We anticipate physicians will be the biggest users,=94 DHEC's Harling told the pharmacists' group last month. That's the experience of Kentucky=92s 7-year-old KASPER system. South Carolina's system is based on that one; 90 percent of its queries come from doctors. Kentucky's doctors, as a bonus, have found they can independently check if patients are taking their medicine or not getting prescriptions refilled, a KASPER spokesman said. Failure to take medicines is a major problem, particularly among the elderly, studies show. S.C. Medical Association president Dr. Gerald Harmon said he's looking forward to doing quick checks via computer on his patients' medications. =93It can help our practices in many, many ways,=94 said Harmon, who still has concerns about privacy. But the potential benefits are significant, he said. WHY NOW In recent years, about 25 other states have installed similar programs with the help of federal drug-fighting grants. A few S.C. lawmakers and DHEC's Harling pushed for a state law for years while working with doctors and pharmacists, said Rep. Tracy Edge, R-Horry. Harling was instrumental in getting the $350,000 federal grant to buy the system, said Edge, who co-sponsored the bill with former House Speaker David Wilkins, R-Greenville. The money and Wilkins' clout helped the bill pass and survive Sanford's veto. Health Information Designs of Auburn, Ala., will set up the computer and has a $635,000 contract to operate it through 2012. The system does have a loophole -- perhaps an important one. The many people buying drugs online, using online doctors and pharmacies in other states, won't be entered in the system. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek