Pubdate: Mon, 13 Oct 2014
Source: Columbia Daily Tribune ( MO )
Copyright: 2014 Columbia Daily Tribune
Contact:  http://www.columbiatribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/91
Author: Nathanial S.  Nolanmissouri
Note: Nathanial S.  Nolan is a student in the University of Missouri 
School of Medicine.

MISSOURI MUST MONITOR PRESCRIPTION DRUG SALES

Over the past two decades a silent epidemic has swept the nation, 
killing tens of thousands of people.  The health care industry is 
quietly battling the problem of prescription drug abuse but has yet 
to make substantial progress.  The release of long-acting opioid pain 
medications by drug companies has led to their use in the management 
of chronic pain.  Though the management of chronic pain is not a 
direct misuse of the drug, the U.S.  has seen a dramatic rise in 
opioid prescriptions: 402 percent between 1997 and 2007.

As a third-year medical student, I see the significant problem this 
poses for physicians.  Drugs prescribed with the best intent, for 
what physicians believe to be real health problems, become easily 
diverted, which is a nice way of saying the drugs are sold for 
recreational use.  A 2010 study found that 6 of the top 10 substances 
abused by seniors in high school were pharmaceuticals.  This abuse 
has become so severe that deaths from prescription drug overdose rose 
by 118 percent from 1999 to 2011.  These numbers have helped drug 
overdose become the leading cause of injury-related death, beating 
out motor vehicle accidents.

Over the past two decades a silent epidemic has swept the nation, 
killing tens of thousands of people.  The health care industry is 
quietly battling the problem of prescription drug abuse but has yet 
to make substantial progress.  The release of long-acting opioid pain 
medications by drug companies has led to their use in the management 
of chronic pain.  Though the management of chronic pain is not a 
direct misuse of the drug, the U.S.  has seen a dramatic rise in 
opioid prescriptions: 402 percent between 1997 and 2007.

As a third-year medical student, I see the significant problem this 
poses for physicians.  Drugs prescribed with the best intent, for 
what physicians believe to be real health problems, become easily 
diverted, which is a nice way of saying the drugs are sold for 
recreational use.  A 2010 study found that 6 of the top 10 substances 
abused by seniors in high school were pharmaceuticals.  This abuse 
has become so severe that deaths from prescription drug overdose rose 
by 118 percent from 1999 to 2011.  These numbers have helped drug 
overdose become the leading cause of injury-related death, beating 
out motor vehicle accidents.

There are many mechanisms being developed to combat the misuse of 
prescription drugs.  One widely adopted method is prescription drug 
monitoring programs.  These are electronic databases, used by 
pharmacists and physicians, that keep track of who picks up what 
drugs, who prescribed them and when.

Recently Missouri has been called "a haven for prescription drug 
addicts" because it is the only state that does not have such a 
monitoring program in place.  In fact, this summer Missouri was the 
subject of an in-depth investigation by The New York Times, which 
highlighted how specific legislators have killed attempts to build 
such a system.

When entering practice, physicians are sworn to "do no harm," and the 
vast majority practice with that mindset.  However, doctors in 
Missouri are currently practicing blind.  Without a monitoring system 
in place, a physician has no idea that patient X might be seeking 
care at three separate clinics for his or her back pain, all of which 
prescribe him or her narcotics.  This is not an improper use of such 
drugs on the part of the physician, but not knowing what your 
patients are already being prescribed is an injustice to clinicians, 
placing them at a disadvantage.

There is evidence that Missouri's problems are bleeding into 
neighboring states.  Many individuals have been arrested for crossing 
into Missouri to fill their prescriptions, which essentially bypasses 
their own state's monitoring program.  National news outlets have 
also pointed out that a number of pain clinics are popping up 
suspiciously close to Missouri's borders.  Ultimately, Missouri is 
doing a poor job to curb prescription drug abuse.  It has the 
seventh-highest overdose mortality rate of the entire United States, 
and according to a recent Report on Prescription Drug Abuse, Missouri 
scored 3 out of 10 on its regulatory actions -- the second-lowest 
score of all 50 states.

Legislative action against prescription drug abuse can 
work.  Florida, a state that had notoriously high rates of 
prescription drug abuse, reported that between 2010 and 2012 there 
was a 23 percent decrease in prescription drug overdoses due to new 
statewide regulations.

One of these government interventions was a prescription drug 
monitoring program.  Other states have reported similar success with 
their drug monitoring programs, which raises the question: Why 
doesn't Missouri have one? This question is being asked by Missouri's 
chapter of the American College of Physicians, whose council readily 
endorsed such a program.

In a few short years I will be a physician practicing in the state of 
Missouri.  I cannot imagine how devastating it would be to 
unknowingly contribute to a patient's addiction and possible 
demise.  Though monitoring programs will not totally remove the 
threat of abuse and addiction, they can give medical practitioners 
the knowledge to make sound prescribing decisions.

The state of Missouri and its physicians need a prescription drug 
monitoring program to effectively battle this problem.  Ultimately, 
thousands of lives might be saved by it.
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MAP posted-by: Richard