Pubdate: Sun, 6 Dec 1998 Source: Age, The (Australia) Page: 6 Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Copyright: 1998 David Syme & Co Ltd Author: Darren Gray SCRIPT FRAUD PROBE SET UP Prescription pad forgeries are on the increase. The Pharmaceutical Society of Australia has launched a $100,000 investigation into prescription fraud, a problem it believes is greatly under-recognised. The study will establish just how common prescription fraud is and come up with strategies and technologies to detect altered scripts or forged scripts from stolen prescription pads. The president of the Victorian branch of the Pharmaceutical Society of Australia, Mr Irvine Newton, said the society was greatly concerned about the rising use of misappropriated drugs. Victoria Police statistics for 1996-97 reveal more than 400 offences relating to prescription forgery. But Mr Newton believes the problem is far greater. ``I think that's just the tip of the iceberg ... I think it might be in the thousands,'' he said last week. On the surface, the statistics suggest there is less than one prescription fraud for every 100,000 prescriptions dispensed. Victoria has 1200 pharmacies which dispense an estimated 43 million prescriptions a year. One of the more prevalent forgeries, said Mr Newton, was when patients changed prescriptions of temazepam tablets to temazepam capsules. The minor tranquilliser could then be injected by patients, he said. Other common prescription forgeries were for patients to add an item to the bottom of an otherwise legitimate prescription, or to change the quantity of a medication or the strength of a medication, he said. One forgery noticed by pharmacists was when patients changed the strength of Serepax (minor tranquiliser) prescriptions, from 15 milligrams to 30 milligrams per tablet, Mr Newton said. Occasionally, completely fake prescription pads were produced, he said. ``This contributes to the illicit drug trade. One of the real reasons why this study is so necessary is that one of the problems of the illicit drug scene is the mixture of drugs (being used),'' Mr Newton said. The one-year study, which is being funded by the Victorian Law Enforcement Drug Fund, was welcomed by doctors. The Victorian chairman of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, Dr Chris Hogan, said the depth of the problem was not known. ``The forgery of prescriptions is a difficult topic, because while we can pick up the bad forgeries, obviously we have not picked up the good ones,'' he said. ``The most common forgeries are for the benzodiazepines or for drugs of addiction, such as morphine and pethidine,'' he said. To help reduce prescription fraud a growing number of doctors are keeping computer records of the prescriptions they write. Computerisation allows prescriptions to be cross-referenced later on for irregularities. - --- Checked-by: Rich O'Grady