Pubdate: Tue, 19 Apr 2011
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Page: A - 8
Copyright: 2011 Hearst Communications Inc.
Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1
Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388
Author: Debra J. Saunders

RESTRICTIONS ON COLD, ALLERGY DRUGS HURT THE SICK

You know the war on drugs has gone too far when politicians keep
ratcheting up restrictions on cold and allergy medications in order to
prevent kitchen drug labs from buying pills and converting them into
methamphetamine.

In 2005, Congress passed a law requiring consumers to show a driver's
license or other ID in order to purchase Sudafed and 14 other
over-the-counter cold and allergy medications. The buyer must register
in a logbook.

Right after the law passed, the amount of methamphetamine that the
Drug Enforcement Agency seized dropped, but then it started to rise.
The drug trade has proved to be a crafty, adaptable foe. "Mom and pop"
meth labs started "smurfing" - sending people to multiple retailers to
buy pills. Also, users figured out how to "shake and bake" small
quantities of meth in 2-liter jugs. Toxic meth labs found a new home -
in cars.

Worse, Mexican cartels moved in to fill the vacuum. A 2010 U.N. drug
report said there had been a sharp decline in the number of small and
medium-sized meth labs in the United States, "although production loss
was offset by increasing large-scale manufacture in neighboring
Mexico." The report tracked changes in the street price of
methamphetamine. Prices spiked for six to nine months after changes in
the law, then "manufacturers were able to retool operations and find
new sources of chemicals" and the prices dropped back to where they
had been.

Enter state lawmakers. Oregon and Mississippi have already passed laws
requiring law-abiding citizens to get prescriptions for what had been
over-the-counter medications. Lawmakers in other states - including
California, Alabama and Colorado - are considering similar bills.

I understand that methamphetamine addiction is an ugly creature that
destroys families, eats through bodies and endangers children. But if
the pharmacy registry and 250-pill per month quantity limit mainly
served to drive the trade to Mexico, then the prescription requirement
will not stop the trade either.

Meanwhile, it surely would drive up health costs by making other
people - law-abiding people - see a doctor when they have a bad cold.

I remember talking to the office of Sen. Dianne Feinstein in 2005
before the Combat Methamphetamine Act, which she co-sponsored, passed.
A spokesman assured me, "Companies sell cold medications in Europe
without pseudoephedrine, and the same could be true here."

What happened is: A lot of people - like me - with colds and allergies
started to wonder why the stuff they were buying didn't work as well
as it used to. Many don't know they can get something that works
better if they show the pharmacist their driver's license.

The Consumer Healthcare Products Association warned that if half of
Americans who use pseudoephedrine drugs had to visit a doctor to get a
prescription, it would cost $750 million per year. Meth addicts won't
be burdened by any new laws. It's the law-abiding who will pay.

Ethan Nadelmann, founder of the anti-drug war Drug Policy Alliance,
asked, "Who suffers?"

I'll answer. Factor in the unnecessary health care costs, the
long-term effects on supply and price, and the answer is: not meth
addicts.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake