Pubdate: Mon, 30 Dec 2002
Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN)
Copyright: 2002 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co.
Contact:  http://www.knoxnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226
Author: Tom Sharp, Associated Press

STATE'S PRESCRIPTION DRUG DATABASE STARTS UP JAN. 1

NASHVILLE - A database to allow the state to keep track of all 
controlled-substance prescriptions filled in Tennessee goes into effect Jan. 1.

Doctors and pharmacists have known for some time that people abuse 
prescriptions, either to feed their own drug habit or to get drugs to sell 
on the street. But there never has been any way to keep track of it.

But on Wednesday the Controlled Substances Monitoring Act kicks in, and 
that could change.

The act sets up a database to compile every prescription for a specific 
list of drugs, many of them painkillers, filled in the state by 
pharmacists, doctors and even veterinarians.

It establishes a committee to check the data for trends - to identify one 
person filling numerous prescriptions for the same or similar drugs, for 
instance - and empowers the committee to relay that information to the 
proper medical authorities and, if necessary, to the proper law enforcement 
agency.

"The information will, hopefully, be used to detect any patterns of abuse," 
said Baeteena Black, executive director of the Tennessee Pharmacists 
Association, which worked to get the law passed.

Rep. David Shepard, D-Dickson, a pharmacist who sponsored the bill in the 
House, said the idea of tracking prescriptions arose because Tennessee has 
an abnormally high use of hydrocodone, a synthetic narcotic marketed under 
the brand names Vicodin and Loratab, among others.

"States that have implemented similar laws have seen a 45 percent reduction 
in drug diversion (resale)," Shepard said.

"We think it's a substantial problem or we wouldn't have gone to all this 
effort," said Black, who said the bill was in the works for four years in 
the Legislature before being approved last summer. "It's a substantial 
problem in every state, not just here."

She said many abusers of prescription drugs "begin legitimately, build up a 
tolerance, and, before long, they go to physical and psychological addiction."

The program is being funded through fees paid by pharmacists and other drug 
dispensers, she said.

Since the database will contain sensitive personal information, deciding 
who has access to it was a critical aspect of the legislative debate.

"We're writing the rules now for who has access, how the information can be 
disseminated, what data are accumulated," said Kendall Lynch, director of 
the state Board of Pharmacy.

The Board of Pharmacy is the keeper of the database. Lynch and two board 
members are on the 14-member committee that oversees it.

The biggest debate in the Legislature was over how much access law 
enforcement officials should have to the data. A compromise was reached, 
but proponents of the law insist that was a side issue.

"This is health-care legislation," Lynch said. "You can treat people for 
addiction for $3,000 a year, but if you throw them in jail, it'll cost you 
$30,000 a year."

The act requires a report on the dispensing of a controlled substance 
unless it is administered directly, such as in an emergency room; is 
dispensed in less than a 48-hour supply; or is dispensed at a methadone clinic.

Wally Kirby of the Tennessee District Attorney General's Conference said 
the law contains safeguards to prevent misuse by law enforcement agencies 
but will allow police access to the information under some circumstances.

"The district attorney can ask to see the information on an individual by 
petitioning a court, similar to getting a search warrant," Kirby said. "The 
DA has to prove probable cause to a judge before he can get access. The 
safeguards are there so you can't go on a witch hunt."
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