Prescription
Drugs:
Alabama
to
Join
Growing
List
of
States
Tracking
Prescriptions
12/23/05
https://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle-old/416/alabamatrack.shtml
Beginning
next month, Alabama will join at least 20 other states in tracking patients'
prescriptions for frequently abused drugs. The prescription drug
databases are described by proponents as aimed at preventing addicts and
drug dealers from "doctor shopping" to obtain large quantities of drugs
such as Oxycontin or Xanax, which are popular on the black market.
But they come at a time when tens of millions of Americans suffer from
chronic pain and doctors are increasingly leery of prescribing large doses
of popular pain relievers for fear of prosecution.
|
|
|
OxyContin |
The
state legislature passed the tracking law in 2004, and beginning in April,
doctors, pharmacists, and veterinarians will be required to send information
about prescriptions for certain controlled substances, including the patient's
name and address, to the state database. A pilot project where doctors
and pharmacists voluntarily report such information gets underway January
1.
Police
will be able to access the database after presenting probable cause to
the state health department. Doctors and pharmacists will be able
to access the database to check up on their own patients, according to
the Alabama Department of Public Health. In a concession to patient
privacy advocates, disclosing database information will be a crime.
Prescriptions
must be reported for all Alabama Class II to Class IV drugs (identical
to Schedule II through Schedule IV drugs under the federal Controlled Substances
Act). Such drugs include tranquilizers, stimulants, and opiates.
Prescriptions for drugs such as antibiotics will not be tracked.
The
law was pushed by Sen. Larry Means (D-Attalla), who told the Birmingham
News he filed a bill after two local teens died of Oxycontin overdoses.
"We're not trying to stop prescription drugs. We're trying to stop
doctor shopping and over-prescribing," Means said. "I think the program
will work, and we will save some lives."
According
to the National Conference of State Legislatures, at least 20 states have
established similar databases. They are California, Hawaii, Idaho,
Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada, New
York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West
Virginia and Wyoming.
-- END --
Issue #416
-- 12/23/05
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Law
Enforcement:
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Corrupt
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Prescription
Drugs:
Alabama
to
Join
Growing
List
of
States
Tracking
Prescriptions
|
Latin
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