Pubdate: Sat, 19 Feb 2011 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Page: A4 Copyright: 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Arian Campo-Flores FIGHT OVER A FIX FOR FLORIDA 'PILL MILLS' Appalachian Region Seeks Tracking System to Stem Flow of Painkillers, but Costs, Efficacy Questioned MIAMI--Florida Gov. Rick Scott's call to cancel a state drug-monitoring program has sparked an uproar in Appalachian states that say they are deluged with illegally bought pills from South Florida pain clinics. Supporters of the program, which has yet to start operating, say it would help combat Florida's "pill mills"--shady storefront operations that provide a bounty of prescription drugs, such as oxycodone and hydrodone, for addicts and traffickers. The tracking system would include a centralized database to help identify buyers who are accumulating large numbers of pills and the doctors who are overprescribing them. In his recently released budget proposal, however, Mr. Scott recommended repealing the 2009 law directing the state to set up the system. Mr. Scott has raised concerns about the database's effectiveness and its possible intrusion on patient privacy. Pointing to a $3.6 billion budget deficit for the coming fiscal year, he also worries that the state would end up paying for a program that lawmakers designed to be funded by federal grants and private donations. Most drug-monitoring programs in other states rely on both federal and state funds. "The governor does not support paying for a program with taxpayer dollars that was originally intended to be funded privately," said Brian Burgess, a spokesman for Mr. Scott. The governor's opposition has provoked outrage in states on the receiving end of Florida's pill pipeline. "It seems Gov. Scott wants Florida to become the oxy-tourism capital of the world," said Lt. Gov. Daniel Mongiardo of Kentucky. Lawmakers in Kentucky and West Virginia have filed resolutions urging Mr. Scott to reconsider. Mr. Scott questions whether unethical clinics will actually self-report to the database, though such reporting is required under the law. He also says pharmacies such as CVS and Walgreens already keep records of patients' prescriptions. Critics say pharmacies don't talk to one another, something a central database would resolve. Pill mills have flourished in Florida, especially in Broward County, in recent years. Weak standards governing who can set them up, a lack of oversight by state agencies and the absence of a prescription-monitoring program have contributed to the problem, said Sherry Green, chief executive of the nonprofit National Alliance for Model State Drug Laws. According to the Florida attorney general's office, clinics are often cash-only enterprises employing doctors who write prescriptions for painkillers without examining patients. They have proved to be a magnet for buyers in the Southeast. According to Frank Rapier, director of the Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, highway patrol officers in hot spots like eastern Tennessee routinely stop vanloads of people returning from Florida with fresh stockpiles of prescription drugs. In West Virginia, state Sen. Evan Jenkins said flights on discount airlines between Huntington, W. Va., and Fort Lauderdale, Fla., have been dubbed the "Oxycontin Express." States in the region have been cracking down. Kentucky created one of the first prescription-monitoring programs in the country in 1999. The system has helped stamp out the sort of storefront businesses seen in Broward County, according to Keith Humphreys, a Stanford University researcher who has studied the programs. In all, 34 states have implemented them. In Florida, the proliferation of pain clinics finally prompted the legislature to act. But the only way to secure the necessary votes for the program from fiscally conservative lawmakers was to bar it from relying on state funding, said Bruce Grant, former director of the Florida Office of Drug Control, which Mr. Scott disbanded last month, partly for cost-cutting reasons. Mr. Scott's opposition to the law has drawn criticism in Florida itself, some from fellow Republicans. "It's really disappointing," said Greg Giordano, chief legislative assistant for GOP state Sen. Mike Fasano, who sponsored the 2009 law. Mr. Giordano said a nonprofit foundation created to fund the database had raised $1.2 million, which would cover start-up costs. "Repealing [the law] doesn't save the state any money," he said. Mr. Grant says, however, that beyond the funds needed to start the program, it would require about $500,000 a year to run--money Gov. Scott argues could end up coming from state coffers. Indeed, Mr. Fasano, who intends to continue championing the system, has filed a bill that would lift the prohibition against using state funds to finance it. The governor faces stiff opposition in the legislature, which must approve any repeal. Senate President Mike Haridopolos, a Republican, also has said he is open to public financing. "If necessary, we will have to put some state money toward it," he said. "People are dying." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake