Pubdate: Tue, 29 Apr 2003
Source: Canadian Medical Association Journal (Canada)
Copyright: 2003 Canadian Medical Association
Contact:  http://www.cmaj.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/754
Author: Donalee Moulton
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone)

"HILLBILLY HEROIN" ARRIVES IN CAPE BRETON

Illegal use of the prescription painkiller oxycodone has risen
significantly in Cape Breton, calling into question the effectiveness
of Nova Scotia's 10-year-old prescription program concerning opioid
drugs.

"I was stunned to hear oxycodone is the number 1 street drug in Cape
Breton," says Dr. Richard MacLachlan, head of the Department of Family
Medicine at Dalhousie University. "We obviously have a big problem. We
have in Nova Scotia arguably the best program for monitoring
prescription narcotics. ... It's the tightest in the country, and it's
obviously not working."

The move of oxycodone abuse into rural Nova Scotia follows a similar
development in the US, where "hillbilly heroin" has been blamed for
numerous overdose deaths in several economically deprived states.

Nova Scotia's drug-monitoring program requires physicians who
prescribe opioids such as oxycodone to use a triplicate prescribing
pad, with copies for the doctor's records, the pharmacist and the
prescription monitoring program. The prescription, valid for only 7
days, carries the name and billing number of the physician as well as
the patient's name and address.

"It's a sluggish system," says MacLachlan. "Months can go by before
patients and physicians come to the surface." As a result, doctors who
are overprescribing and patients who are double-doctoring can slip
through the cracks.

Dr. Harry Pollett, an anesthetist in North Sydney, isn't convinced the
oxycodone problem in Cape Breton is greater than elsewhere in the
country. In fact, he says local pharmacists have told him that the
number of oxycodone prescriptions is down from last year. "Where are
the drugs coming from?" he asks.

MacLachlan says illegal manufacture is an unlikely option, and so is
theft from a patient who was prescribed the drug, since doctors would
learn about the thefts when patients requested new prescriptions.
Robbery of a pharmacy -- there were 2 in Cape Breton between December
and March -- and a prescription from a physician are the other options.

"I have to fear that my profession is being lax about prescribing,"
says MacLachlan. -- Donalee Moulton, Halifax 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake