Pubdate: Tue, 03 Aug 2010 Source: Savannah Morning News (GA) Copyright: 2010 Savannah Morning News Contact: http://www.savannahnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/401 BITTER PILLS IN THE fight to prevent prescription drug abuse, state lawmakers should listen to their pharmacists, specifically Sen. Buddy Carter and Rep. Ron Stephens. Both of these elected officials from Chatham County are licensed pharmacists. They recognize the need for a statewide database to track individuals who have been prescribed Schedule II or III substances - legal drugs most commonly abused - and those who are doing the prescribing. At present, Georgia is the only state in the Southeast that has no such database. The absence of such a tool makes the Peach State nearly helpless at preventing prescription drug addicts and dealers from crossing state lines to get multiple prescriptions filled. Ditto for those who live in-state. Through doctor shopping and duping multiple pharmacists, abusers are able to obtain heavy-duty narcotics, such as oxycodone. A digital database would be a big help in two ways. First, it would assist pharmacists in withholding prescription meds from addicts and dealers who trick several physicians into prescribing pills for the same ailment. Second, a statewide database would help the Georgia Board of Pharmacy flag the doctor's offices that are handing out prescriptions like candy. Then authorities could single them out for investigation. These two steps should help curtail street dealing in prescription drugs. That's a growing problem, according to the Chatham-Savannah Counter Narcotics Team, and police agencies statewide. It's simple economics. Some versions of oxycodone have a street value of $80 a pill. It's an issue that deserves no less attention than methamphetamine abuse. Addiction experts say the prescription opioids can be just as difficult to kick, if not more so. Pharmacists and police agencies are rightly frustrated. Where meth labs may be hidden in the woods, this venue for illegally obtaining drugs is right out in the open. The thing needed to fight the abuse - a statewide database - is easy and inexpensive to set up. There is even a federal grant to cover the costs. Georgia has already qualified for the money, but can't accept it because the state has no law implementing the program. Both Rep. Stephens and Sen. Carter have worked to pass legislation for the past couple of years. Unfortunately, most lawmakers have balked. The major hang-up in the legislature has been over patient privacy, but this concern is addressed in the legislation. The measure gives the prescription drug registry the same doctor-patient confidentiality as other medical documents. Mr. Carter's bill would also disallow any improper "fishing trips" by law enforcement agencies. Police agencies would have to have a subpoena requesting information in relation to a specific case before the Pharmacy Board could release details. Lives and families can be destroyed just as easily by addiction to prescription painkillers as by addiction to cocaine or meth. By failing to act, the Georgia legislature allows a treatable sickness to fester. When the General Assembly reconvenes in January, lawmakers should provide a remedy. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt