Saturday, July 20, 2013
Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Under Attack
The Florida Prescription Drug Monitoring Program is under attack. Launched in 2011 to track controlled substance prescribing, the database was designed to shut down pill mills and stop doctor shopping. According to Attorney General Pam Bondi the database is an important tool against drug abuse and that prescription drug-related deaths have declined for the first time in nearly a decade.
But according to a law suit filed in Volusia county the Florida's prescription drug monitoring database program violates the state's constitution, invades the privacy of residents and subjects them to unreasonable searches.
The constitutional challenge is part of a growing legal battle over how the State Attorney's Office for the 7th Judicial Circuit wound up with the prescription records for an estimated 3,300 residents and why that information was provided to five of six defense attorneys representing defendants related to a prescription fraud investigation.
The American Civil Liberties Union said this week it could file federal complaints with the Department of Justice and the Department of Health and Human Services related to the disclosure of the prescription information.
As a physician, supporter and PDMP user I submitted a letter to the editor to the Miami Herald which was published on 07/15/2013 pointing out that it was the illegal use of data obtained by an attorney which triggered this debate and that the PDMP does NOT violate patient privacy.
I wholeheartedly agree with State Attorney Pam Bondi that "there are strong safeguards in place to protect people's prescription drug information within the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program by limiting access to that information, and those safeguards have not been compromised."
These facts should be taken into consideration before attempting to dismantling the PDMP which is an essential tool to safe lives and protect the public from prescription opioid abuse and diversion.
Yours
Bernd
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