Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Pubdate: Fri, 03 Jul 1998 VIAGRA ONLINE THANKFUL AS many men may be by the easy availability of Viagra over the Internet, federal and state officials should waste no time in cracking down on companies that sell the drug without requiring traditional prescriptions. Chronicle science writer Carl T. Hall reported that one of the companies peddling the exceedingly popular anti-impotence pill as well as other prescription medicines on the Internet required only a short, customer-completed ``medical history'' form. The form is sent to the drug distributor along with money for the pills and a $50 ``physician review'' fee. The ``review'' physician neither talks to nor examines the hopeful buyer. That lack of contact between doctor and patient is in disturbing contravention to the time-honored practice of pairing doctor knowledge of a patient with a prescription for that patient. Most prescribed drugs are not available over the counter for a good reason. They may have side effects that require an evaluation of appropriateness on a case-by-case basis. Viagra has been linked to 174 reports of side effects and 31 deaths, although, as Hall reported, it is not clear whether the drug itself or underlying health problems were to blame. While serious questions still exist about the safety of a drug, as they do with Viagra, it is extremely irresponsible to allow the medicine to be distributed through the mails as if the pills were M&M's. With every passing day, the public witnesses both the good and ill that comes from the Internet marvel. The disclosure that scores of men are essentially writing their own prescriptions to get a potentially dangerous drug is an illustration of the Internet used for ill. 1998 San Francisco Chronicle Page A26 - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)