Pubdate: Thu, 07 Aug 2014 Source: Diamondback, The (U of MD Edu) Copyright: 2014 Diamondback Contact: http://www.diamondbackonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/758 Author: Taylor Swaak UNIVERSITY SYSTEM WILL MONITOR INTERNET FOR DRUG TRENDS The Program Will Be Replacing a 38-Year-Old System This university's Center of Substance Abuse and Research is beginning development of a national drug data collection system this month. The National Drug Early Warning System will contrast with traditional substance abuse tracking. Previously, researchers used surveys and studies that were outdated by the time data were released. This new system will monitor Internet content to provide information on drug trends as they emerge, said CESAR Director Eric Wish. "Drug abuse creates problems in every state," said Kathleen Rebbert-Franklin, deputy director of population-based behavioral health at the state Health and Mental Hygiene Department. "There's a lot of public health and public safety ramifications to the issues of substance use." After a competitive application process, CESAR was selected to receive five years of funding totaling about $3 million from the National Institute of Drug Abuse. This money will go toward developing the new substance abuse tracking system, said Wilson Compton, the institute's deputy director. Given recent increases in overdose deaths, prescription opioid misuse, heroin use increases and shifts in marijuana policy, Compton said, new measures are needed to keep emerging drug trends in check. The new system will replace NIDA's current 38-year-old system, the Community Epidemiology Work Group, which allows a cluster of experts from different regions to meet twice a year to review conditions in areas across the country, Compton said. "[The new system] will build on the success and history of [the Community Epidemiology Work Group] but will also take advantage of data available using social media, which is shifting the way information about drug epidemics may be possible to collect," Compton said. Wish said CESAR plans to collaborate with scientists at this university in information systems and computer science to enact proper and efficient web monitoring. "We're also going to be setting up an electronic communication network for experts throughout the country to be able to, on a real time basis, report on potential drugs emerging in the area," Wish said. The early warning system will not only consist of virtual research; it will also involve hands-on intervention, thanks in part to 12 collaborative "lookout" sites across the country. If a drug outbreak occurs, an advanced expert advisory board of scientists can decide to send a research team to the area to collect information, Wish said. With synthetic marijuana, synthetic cannabinoids and designer drugs gaining popularity, data collection, sometimes in the form of biological specimens like urine, is necessary to distinguish which exact metabolites - products of metabolism - are in these newer drugs, Wish said. "We won't be relying just on people's self reports to identify drugs that they're using," Wish said. "Most people who use these designer drugs, they know what they think they took, but until we do the actual testing, no one knows what they actually took." Compton said the first steps the center will take in the system's development include building its infrastructure and planning the first meeting of experts. The early warning system is expected to be functioning within six months to a year. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom