Pubdate: Wed, 09 Mar 2011 Source: Savannah Morning News (GA) Copyright: 2011 Savannah Morning News Contact: http://www.savannahnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/401 Author: Tom Barton Note: Tom Barton is the editorial page editor of the Savannah Morning News. PILL BILL NEEDS TEETH I think I understand why some Georgia lawmakers are reluctant to crack down on sleazy doctors and pill pushers who are making fortunes by addicting people to dangerous narcotics. They don't talk to the right people. Otherwise, State Sen. Buddy Carter, a Pooler pharmacist, wouldn't have to push watered-down legislation, out of political necessity, to create a statewide computer database that would track prescriptions of oxycodone, Vicodin, Percocet and other addictive painkillers. Consider his bill that recently cleared the Senate and is now awaiting action in the House. It includes this limp-noodle language -- immunity for all doctors and pharmacists who didn't check the database but had a patient or customer who got popped on the street for peddling $30 pain pills or died of a drug overdose. Thus participation is voluntary. Sleazoids get a free pass. Whoop-dee and do. Actually, Georgia is one of a few states with nothing in place to combat prescription drug abuse. So this bill -- Carter's third stab at something useful -- is better than nothing. But lawmakers operate inside a bubble. If you want to find what's happening on the street, you don't look under the Gold Dome in Atlanta. Instead, you talk to law enforcement agents who work drug cases every day in this part of Georgia. If you do, here are a few disturbing things you will learn: . The street-level price for oxycodone, one of the most widely abused and lethal drugs in this area, is $1 per milligram. Thus a 30-mg pill sells for $30 each. That's $900 net for a month's supply of 30 pills, or around 10 times the amount paid at the cash register (there's more profit if it's covered by insurance). Can anyong say ka-ching? . This is a white man's crime. It's non-violent, too, assuming you overlook the drug overdose cases at Memorial Health. The crack trade is mostly controlled by violent, mostly black thugs. Perhaps if there were more shootings among sleazy doctors and pill peddlers, lawmakers would be more willing to crack down. . Some pharmacies run out of painkillers early in the day. They tell customers to come early, especially those driving up from Florida where "pain management" mills have flourished under that state's lax oversight. Incredibly, Florida Gov. Rick Scott opposes a database to track prescriptions, claiming it represents an invasion of privacy. Pray that Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal doesn't suffer a similar lapse of sanity. . Illegal prescriptions are generally not filled at places like Walgreens or CVS. Why? They already have computer databases and employ pharmacists who are paid by the hour, not by the volume. . "This is the new crack epidemic. We're having to readjust our manpower accordingly." Those aren't my words. That's what a drug agent told me. Let's hope the Georgia Legislature readjusts this bill accordingly by giving it some teeth. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake