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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: Editorial: Doctor Shopping
Title:US MO: Editorial: Doctor Shopping
Published On:2005-05-18
Source:Southeast Missourian (MO)
Fetched On:2008-01-16 12:47:58
DOCTOR SHOPPING

Drugs like heroin, crack and Ecstasy get most of the attention from
law-enforcement agents and the media, but about one-third of drug abuse
today involves prescription drugs. People who are addicted to these drugs
often acquire them from doctors who presume they are prescribing them for
real pain. But doctor shopping is a well-known phenomenon in the medical and
dental professions. Most watch for the red flags that signal a drug abuser:
someone who doesn't want the drugs paid by insurance or someone who wants
only a certain drug prescribed or someone who calls the doctor or dentist at
home, where there are no records. They have been placed in the position of
policing the abuse of prescription drugs.

Doctor shopping is just now getting the attention of law enforcement.
A Jackson man who will soon stand trial is accused of obtaining 7,000
hydrocodone pills over a period of 15 months by going from doctor to
doctor with complaints of pain.

The state is trying to devise a program for tracking prescriptions.
The system would allow physicians, dentists and pharmacists to share
information about the drugs prescribed. This system is badly needed.
Keeping drugs from being prescribed to drug addicts in the first place
seems the best way to begin curbing the problem.

But doctor shopping is hardly the only way prescription drugs are
being illegally obtained. An estimated 14 percent of youths between
the ages of 12 and 17 are abusing prescription drugs, often by
grabbing pills out of their parents' or grandparents' medicine chests.

When it comes to drug abuse, each of us must be a bit of a policeman.
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