Pubdate: Sat, 27 Jun 2009 Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL) Copyright: 2009 The Gainesville Sun Contact: http://www.gainesville.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/163 CURBING PILL ABUSE Gov. Charlie Crist isn't a philosopher, but by signing an imperfect bill last week, he adhered to the view of the French thinker Voltaire: The perfect is the enemy of the good. Senate Bill 462 is intended to create a statewide, electronic database to enable doctors, pharmacists and even some law enforcement authorities to track the dispensing of high-powered, addictive painkillers, tranquilizers and other drugs. Proponents of the bill include the Florida Medical Association, the Florida Pharmacy Association, many pain-management physicians and a passionate group of survivors whose loved ones died from prescription drug abuse. The consensus view of the bill among supporters is reflected by Dr. Rafael Miguel, director of the pain medicine program at the University of South Florida: "It's not perfect," he told The Sarasota Herald-Tribune. But the bill, he said, is "a major step in the right direction and will help reduce the ready availability and amounts of prescription controlled substances on the streets and in our schools...not to mention reducing the eight deaths per day" related to prescription-drug abuse. Some of the requirements of SB 462 fall short. For example, it allows up to a 15-day delay in reporting and only monitors the dispensing, not the prescribing, of the drugs in question. Furthermore, consistent reviews of the database are not mandatory. Despite its shortcomings, SB 462 represents overdue progress. Florida has been one of only a dozen states without an electronic database for monitoring narcotics and tranquilizers that are frequently abused or sold on the black market. In Florida, medical examiners find that about 3,000 deaths per year are attributable to the overuse of prescription drugs. A functional database, other states have found, is crucial for effective oversight of commonly abused drugs that are supposed to be prudently prescribed and highly regulated at all points in the health care system. Patient rights and security must be protected, but the evidence shows that individual and public safety are clearly at risk in the absence of modern oversight. Senate Bill 462 gives the state Department of Health until Dec. 1, 2010, to implement an electronic database. That deadline gives the department and the Legislature time to identify and fix shortcomings in the legislation. Florida waited too long to tackle this problem, which is part public-health crisis, part public-safety emergency. This imperfect new law is a good first step. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake