Thursday, September 01, 2011

Pill Mills Under Pressure

Attached a link http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/01/us/01drugs.html to today's New York Times front page article titled "Florida Shutting ‘Pill Mill’ Clinics."
The article highlights the accomplishments made despite the initial resistance by the current administration in Tallahassee.:

As of July, Florida doctors are barred, with a few exceptions, from dispensing narcotics and addictive medicines in their offices or clinics. As a result, doctors’ purchases of Oxycodone, which reached 32.2 million doses in the first six months of 2010, fell by 97 percent in the same period this year.
One indication that law enforcement officials are choking the supply of prescription drugs sold illegally in Florida is that the price of Oxycodone on the streets here has nearly doubled from last year, to $15 per pill from $8.
On Commercial Boulevard, a major street in Broward County, the number of pain clinics has fallen in the past year from 29 to one.
The fallout from the tougher laws may include an increase in pharmacy robberies, a problem that has been worse in Florida than any other state since 2007 (there were 65 armed robberies of pharmacies here last year).

As of today any health care practitioner who has dispensed a Schedule II-IV controlled substance, as defined in section 893.03, F.S. (i.e., OxyContin®, Percocet®, Vicodin®, Klonopin®, Xanax®, and Valium®), is required to report dispensing information to the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program’s database within seven (7) days after dispensing, in accordance with section 893.055, F.S. This includes pharmacies licensed under chapter 465, F.S., and dispensing health care practitioners licensed under chapter 458, 459, 461, 462, or 466, F.S
Now we must push to start educate physicians on how to use the PDMP and to encourage accessing the database to identify "doctors shoppers."
I am optimistic that we can achieve our goals.
Yours
Bernd

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