Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Pubdate: 9 Aug 1998 Author: Victoria Macdonald, Health Correspondent STORE TILLS ALERTED TO OVERDOSE SHOPPERS SUPERMARKETS are to introduce smart till systems and retrain staff to stop people buying lethal quantities of pain-killing drugs. Under legislation which comes into effect on Sept 16, pack sizes of painkillers, such as paracetamol, will be reduced to discourage overdosing. Packs from supermarkets and corner shops will contain no more than 16 tablets or capsules. Packs of 32 will be available only from pharmacies, which will also be able to sell 100 tablets in certain circumstances. There was concern, however, that suicidal customers would be able to buy as many packs of painkillers from supermarkets as they wanted because there would be no pharmacist to control the purchase. To prevent this supermarkets are reviewing their procedures. Asda has already introduced a system that will flash up a message on the check-out till when the maximum number of painkillers is reached. An Asda spokesman said it was a similar system to one which reminds the cashier to ask if a person buying alcohol is 18. Staff were having weekly briefings on the new painkiller legislation. Waitrose is considering whether to introduce a similar system. A spokesman for Tesco said that it had already changed the sizes of its own-brand packs and would also change its tills. He said staff were trained in explaining to customers why they could not buy large quantities of painkillers. There are between 30,000 and 40,000 hospital referrals for paracetamol overdoses every year and between 100 and 150 deaths. As many as 5,000 people are admitted to hospital for aspirin overdoses and about 60 die. The Government announced plans last year to introduce the legislation because of concern that many of the suicides were spontaneous attempts by people with bathroom cabinets full of such drugs. The Department of Health hopes that smaller packs with new warnings will cut hospital admissions and deaths by at least 10 per cent. Last week it was disclosed that millions of paracetamol tablets had been sold with the wrong instructions printed on the packets. Half-a-million packs were pulled off supermarket shelves on Friday but 250,000 packets had already been sold. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski