Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Pill Mills are Gearing up for Big Business

Thanks to the ideological rigidity of our legislature and almost monoptic "vision" of our Governor-Elect the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program is almost dead before even going online. The Office of Drug Control is being dissolved and all employees are gone by January 3rd!
In today's Miami Herald editorial the issues at hand are being pointed out as they are.
Dr. Viamonte Ross, one of the few agency heads asked to resign, has the final opportunity to declare a public health emergency thereby forcing the state to approve an existing PDMP vendor contract. Unfortuantely, the Attorney General (and the Board of Medicine) do not believe that the current status quo justifies such an emergency order. The rate of prescription drug overdose death increased to 7 Floridians a day. So whats the "magic" number 10,20, 100...?
I urge all of you to contact your legislator to support an immediate declaration of a public health emergency.
Yours
Bernd


The Miami Herald
Posted on Tue, Dec. 28, 2010
Pill mills still going strong


When it comes to the unsavory and downright illegal, South Florida owns the market in healthcare scams. Miami-Dade County is the nation's epicenter of Medicare fraud. Broward County is the state's biggest black market in prescription pain killers like oxycodone. By now, many of the pill mills should have been shut down. They're not.

Thanks to lax state oversight, walk-in pain clinics have flourished in Florida in the last three years. A 2009 Miami Herald series highlighted the proliferation of these pill mills. Broward clinics alone sell more oxycodone than is sold in several states. Anyone can get hundreds of pain pills from these clinics. The powerful narcotics are then resold on the street.

The growth of pain clinics, often run by discredited doctors, is causing an epidemic of prescription overdose deaths, says Florida drug czar Bruce Grant. The rate of deaths is about seven per day -- a shocking number that's preventable.

By now, these clinics were supposed to be regulated under tough new rules. Instead, most reforms are in limbo thanks to a contract dispute and a blunder by the Legislature during its November special session.

In 2009, the Legislature passed a bill to create a statewide database of all prescription narcotics sold by doctors and pharmacists to prevent patients from ``doctor shopping'' -- going to multiple clinics and doctors for pills to later resell. Tougher rules governing doctors working in pain clinics and who could own them are also in the new law.

The due date for the database was Dec. 1. The deadline came and went, however, because a company bidding on the project has legally challenged the contract award. Mr. Grant has asked Florida's surgeon general, Dr. Ana M. Viamonte Ros, to approve the contract on an emergency basis to protect public health.

Dr. Viamonte Ros is one of the few agency heads told to resign by Gov.-elect Rick Scott. But she is on the job till Jan. 3. Given those seven daily drug overdoses, Dr. Viamonte Ros should set the database in motion.

The other big glitch in moving forward with the regulations happened because of GOP lawmakers' zeal to override outgoing Gov. Charlie Crist's vetoes. They revived an anti-regulation bill requiring any new rules that may cost businesses or the government more than $200,000 a year to be subjected to legislative review before implementation.

This has stalled many pill-mill regulations, which now must await lawmakers' scrutiny in 2011. In vetoing the bill in its first incarnation, Gov. Crist wisely warned that the law would have required almost every new rule -- which can number in the hundreds in one year alone -- to await mandated review before being applied. What a nightmare.

Despite the setbacks, the state health department commendably has enforced a few rules. In November, state officials began inspecting pain clinics for the first time. So far, 17 clinics have been shut down.

That's a start, but as of November, there were 142 registered clinics in Broward and 94 in Miami-Dade. So much more could be happening right now to prevent more unnecessary deaths.


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