SANTA MONICA, Calif.,
April 27, 2015
/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Consumer Watchdog today applauded a
California Legislature committee for passing a bill that requires
prescribers to check a state database before prescribing the most
addictive medications – like OxyContin and other opioids – to help
prevent prescription drug addiction and thousands of overdose
deaths.
SB 482, authored by Sen. Ricardo
Lara, D-Bell Gardens, will
require prescribers to check Controlled Substance Utilization
Review and Evaluation System (CURES) before prescribing Schedule II
and III drugs for the first time to a patient, and annually if the
course of narcotic treatment continues.
Lisa Greene Bond, whose sister,
Kristin Greene, fatally overdosed on
prescription drugs, testified at the Business, Professions and
Economic Development Committee hearing in support of the bill.
"There is nothing more horrific than watching your own and only
sister come out of her room in a body bag," said Bond. "The system
failed her, her kids and her family. We were failed by not having
this system in place. It is proven in other states it works.
Please don't let this happen to another family again."
In Kristin Greene's room, after
her death, officials and her family found 60 prescriptions, many
for medications that were powerful and potentially addictive,
including sedatives, anti-anxiety medicines and narcotics, written
by nine different medical professionals in the previous five years.
Had Kristin's doctors or pharmacists been required to check the
CURES database before filling those prescriptions, her death may
have been prevented.
"Prescription drug overdoses claim tens of thousands of lives
every year. And nearly 23,000 people died from an overdose of
pharmaceuticals in 2013 nationally," said Sen. Lara. "Its time to
save lives by ensuring that prescribers consult the CURES system
before prescribing drugs."
Dr. Clark Smith, board-certified
in both Addiction Psychiatry and in Pain Medicine, also testified
in support of SB 482.
"As the medical director of drug and alcohol treatment programs
for the past 25 years, I've witnessed an explosion of prescription
drug abuse, with a 500 percent increase in overdose deaths from
1999 through 2010," said Dr. Smith. "Before the CURES database came
online, I'd have to tediously chase down all the doctors
prescribing pills to my doctor-shopping, addicted patients. And
then the patient could just get a new set of doctors to feed their
addiction. With the advent of the CURES database, I had a powerful
life saving tool that could show me exactly what pills my patients
were taking and which doctors were prescribing them."
He added, "I feel certain that when doctors find out that CURES
2.0 is an important, life-saving tool, they will continue to use it
as part of good medical care, to help every patient in California."
"This is a common sense approach to a tragic, yet fixable,
epidemic," said Carmen Balber,
executive director of Consumer Watchdog. "Drug databases like CURES
can reduce a patient's risk for overdose and provide an opportunity
to intervene with patients who are abusing medications.
Unfortunately, the databases are seldom used when not
mandatory."
Other states that require use of a CURES-type database –
New York, Kentucky, Tennessee and West
Virginia – have seen dramatic reductions in the number of
doctor-shoppers and opiate prescriptions. Opiate painkiller
prescriptions declined between 7 and 10 percent in these states,
and "doctor-shopping" by addicts fell by as much as 75 percent. In
February, the Controlled Substance Monitoring Database 2015 Report
to the 109th Tennessee General Assembly reported that: 41 percent
of prescribers report that they are less likely to prescribe
controlled substances after checking the database; 34 percent of
prescribers are more likely to refer a patient for substance abuse
treatment; and, 86 percent of prescribers report that the database
is useful for decreasing doctor shopping.
SB 482 can also mean significant savings for the state and local
governments by reducing health care costs. A 75 percent drop in
doctor-shopping in California, as
experienced in New York when use
of its prescription drug database became mandatory, would reduce
state and local spending on prescription drugs for Medi-Cal
patients by up to $300 million a
year.
In support of the bill:
California Association of Code Enforcement Officers
California College and University
Police Chiefs Association California Conference Board of the
Amalgamated Transit Union California Conference of Machinists
California Correctional Supervisors Organization
California Narcotic Officers' Association (Co-Sponsor)
California Teamsters Public Affairs Council
Consumer Attorneys of California
(Co-Sponsor)
Consumer Federation of California
Consumer Watchdog
Engineers and Scientists of California, IFPTE Local 20, AFL-CIO
International FaithBasedCoalition
International Longshore and Warehouse Union
Los Angeles Police Protective
League
Professional and Technical Engineers, IFPTE Local 21, AFL-CIO
Riverside Sheriffs Organization
UNITE-HERE, AFL-CIO
Utility Workers Union of America
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SOURCE Consumer Watchdog