Pubdate: Mon, 02 Aug 2010 Source: Savannah Morning News (GA) Copyright: 2010 Savannah Morning News Contact: http://www.savannahnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/401 Author: Arek Sarkissian II PRESCRIPTION DRUG ABUSE SPIKE CONTINUES Drug Agents Now Are Seeing Out-Of-Town Prescriptions At Chatham-Area Pharmacies Chatham County is playing host to a new kind of tourist - prescription drug abusers. Over the past nine months, the Chatham-Savannah Counter Narcotics Team has made dozens of arrests and confiscated a countless amount of prescription medication. But after revealing in October that prescription drugs have surpassed illicit drugs in popularity, their efforts may seem negligible. In fact, their caseload only has grown, agents said. "It's really hard to keep up with the numbers that are rising," said CNT Agent Ron Tyran, who investigates prescription drug cases with Agent Angelia Coleman. "There's not a day that Angelia and I go out that the phone doesn't ring and it's someone with more information." The interagency drug enforcement force now works nearly as many prescription drug cases as marijuana or cocaine, Tyran said. And along with investigations weighed down by federal restrictions on patient information and the lack of a state-run prescription monitoring program, now out-of-state visitors are coming to Chatham County to replenish supplies, which only intensifies the problem, Tyran said. "The pharmacists here have been expressing their dissatisfaction with the countless number of prescriptions coming up from Florida with people from other states in the region," he said. "Pharmacists here are telling us those residents are finding it hard to get those prescriptions filled there so they travel here." Prescribing in Florida, filling here Afflicted by a sluggish economy, some Florida doctors have turned to selling prescriptions to make ends meet. Rather than serve patients in Sunshine State communities where the doctors reside, instead they attract addicts and dealers from Tennessee and Kentucky, Tyran said. There's even a Florida doctor who, for a price, will provide people with false MRI results, which can be taken to another doctor for powerful painkillers like Oxycodone, Hydrocodone or Soma. Some doctors even will fill prescriptions on-site, creating one-stop shopping. But they have since raised their prices by up to seven times their retail value. Also, many Florida pharmacists are now refusing to fill prescriptions for people who they suspect are addicted or dealing, Tyran said. "We got a call yesterday from a pharmacist about a guy from Fleming (Ga.) who was in Pooler trying to fill a prescription from Deerfield Beach (Fla.)," he said. "And he already got two filled at a different pharmacy and was attempting to get a third one filled," Coleman added. Once they get the call about a suspicious prescription holder from a pharmacist, CNT agents will head out to the location and conduct an interdiction where they might confiscate a written prescription or controlled substance. Other times they're only collecting information, Coleman said. No help from the state Georgia remains one of a handful of states across the nation without a prescription monitoring program. And efforts to start one have failed repeatedly in the General Assembly, Tyran said. Pharmacist and state Rep. Ron Stephens said lawmakers were close to presenting a bill to Gov. Sonny Perdue last session, but last-minute opposition from a few House members killed the bill. "There are one or two members that really had concerns about leaning to the libertarian side; they had problems with patient confidentiality," Stephens said. Stephens said his pharmacy receives calls every day from people looking for high-octane painkillers, and he regularly turns them away. "I know the problem has gotten worse, tenfold," he said. Since Georgia is the only state in the South without a prescription monitoring program, the problem is magnified along its borders. The issue has become especially problematic in Chatham County because it borders South Carolina, which has a monitoring program, Stephens said. Pharmacists could be the first line of defense against the problem, but lawmakers have neglected to provide them with the tools to be effective, Stephens said. "We're doing it blind because we don't know if the person just filled a prescription in Darien," he said. Even more frustrating to some legislators is the state's proposed monitoring program would be entirely funded by Federal dollars, he said. But Stephens said he was confident next term a bill would land on the governor's desk ready to be signed. Meanwhile, the problem only will get worse, he said. "It's so rampant in our school systems that we're regularly hearing stories," he said. "You're seeing addiction problems at young ages. "And we as pharmacists could be stopping it." Local database flourishing In the meantime, CNT's Tyran said he created a secured website similar to the Savannah-Chatham police Savannah Area Regional Information Center, which is designed to allow pharmacists to track suspected abusers. Tyran said the site provides a forum for frustrated pharmacists to share information about suspected addicts. The site also is regularly updated to reveal people who recently have faced arrests on charges of possession or illegal prescription drug sales. CNT agents will post copies of evidence - like actual prescription orders - so pharmacists can stay informed and aware. The site has helped fight the growing inferno sweeping Chatham County residents, from white collar professionals to blue collar factory workers, but it is not the solution, Tyran said. More dealers switching In the meantime, marijuana and cocaine dealers have made lucrative careers by switching to illegal pill sales. Some forms of Oxycodone, known commercially as OxyContin, can go for up to $80 per pill. "And you've got some people eating three to four of those every day," Coleman said. Tyran added he expected the current low interest in heroin soon to skyrocket as pill addicts look for an alternative when a pill supplier has depleted. Treatment difficult Southside addiction specialist Ray Gaskin said he also has seen a growing list of clients desperate for a way out of the depths of prescription drug addiction. But heroin is up, too, especially among Savannah's college students, Gaskin said. "It's free enterprise; all drug problems are local because of availability," he said. "I have seen some of the younger people downtown doing drugs like heroin, but most people like to know what they're getting. "So they use pills." The county's affinity for pills isn't reserved to the ever-popular drug, Hydrocodone, known commercially as Vicodin. "I am seeing problems with prescription drugs and not just opioids," Gaskin said. "We're seeing Xanax, Adderall, Soma and a drug called Methadone." Gaskin said Methadone generally is known as a safe alternative to help heroin addicts kick the habit, but it's also used as a painkiller. But if it is mixed with the wrong drug or taken in a large dose, it could easily lead to death, he said. Gaskin, who currently serves as president of the Georgia chapter of the American Society of Addiction Medicine and as a professor at the Georgia Medical College, said beating a pill habit actually is harder than kicking methamphetamine addiction. "I'd have to give a nudge to opioids as being more difficult," he said. "Some people can get off meth but not opioids. "But that has been vice-versa." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D