This story made my eyes pop open. Restrict sales on the stuff if you want, but don't put it behind a counter where regular folk with the common cold can't sift through it.
States adopt, weigh law on cold medicines
By JOHN SEEWER Associated Press Writer
Before Oklahoma started forcing pharmacies a year ago to put cold medicines used to make methamphetamine behind their counters, retailers and drug makers fought the idea. Now that Oklahoma has seen a dramatic drop in meth lab seizures, at least 35 states, including Ohio and Kansas, have either adopted or are considering similar laws.
And two of the nation's largest retailers - Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target Corp. - have said in the last two weeks that they will begin moving many non-prescription cold and allergy medications behind the counters.
Even some drug makers are no longer trying to block states from putting restriction on its cold medicines.
"They're realizing they were wrong," said Mark Woodward, spokesman for Oklahoma's Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control.
Oklahoma's law limits the amount of cold medicine that contains pseudoephedrine one can buy at a pharmacy each month. Buyers also must show identification and sign a logbook.
Pseudoephedrine is a key ingredient used in making illegal methamphetamine, a highly addictive drug that has exploded in the Midwest. Also known as crank, ice or crystal, the stimulant can be smoked, snorted, swallowed or injected.
Six states now only allow pharmacies to sell drugs with pseudoephedrine, and seven others make retailers lock up the products or sell them from staffed counters. Legislatures in 22 states are considering similar restrictions.
House lawmakers in Ohio have approved a proposal similar to Oklahoma's law. The provision, tucked into the state budget bill, still needs approval from the Senate. Rep. Timothy DeGeeter, who introduced the proposal, said not all drug companies were supportive.
"They want to make a sale and they want to make it easy for anyone who has a cold or the sniffles to get it," said DeGeeter, a Democrat from Parma. "I'm sure they don't want those products behind the counters."
Woodward, though, said some drug companies are now changing course. He said Pfizer Inc., which initially objected to Oklahoma's law, now is offering support and telling other states how good the law has been.
Pfizer makes Sudafed, one of the cold medicines that contain pseudoephedrine. It also now is selling Sudafed PE, a version that doesn't contain pseudoephedrine.
Oklahoma was on pace to break a state record for meth lab seizures in 2004 until its law took effect in April. Meth lab findings then dropped by 80 percent.
The number of burn patients from meth labs dropped and so did the number of children exposed to the drug, Woodward said.
In October alone, the number of meth labs discovered dropped from 109 to 38. "We hadn't seen a drop in 10 years," he said. "And we tried everything in the book."
The result has been that Oklahoma's neighbors have seen a surge of meth makers looking for cold medicines and a place to produce the drug.
Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius responded by signing a bill two weeks ago that requires cold and allergy tablets containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine to be sold only by pharmacies from behind a counter.
Kyle Smith, spokesman for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, said that similar proposals were knocked down twice before in 1999 and 2002.
The idea wasn't accpeted until lawmakers saw Oklahoma's success, he said.
"No longer could the opposition say it doesn't work," he said. |