Prescription drug abuse targeted

Deaths, crimes spur fresh effort to toughen state laws

Published: Sunday, Dec. 6 2009 12:00 a.m. MST

Utah's other drug problem — prescription drug abuse — has caught the attention of state lawmakers who are nationally known for their crackdown on street drugs and drunken driving but run a state regularly deemed the country's prescription drug abuse capital.

"This is a No. 1 ranking we don't want, we've got a problem in this state and we need to address it," state Attorney General Mark Shurtleff told a group of physicians and care center providers recently.

It is well-known to Shurtleff, to public and private health care providers, pharmacists, drug treatment counselors and police officers who encounter firsthand what they say is a growing problem that has taken a back seat to other state-sanctioned prevention efforts such as stiffening criminal penalties for drunken driving and cracking down on street drugs, particularly methamphetamine.

Lawmakers have wanted to get a handle on prescription drug abuse long before now. Rep. Brad Daw, R-Orem, has been raising the topic since he was elected in 2004. He has introduced four bills so far for the upcoming legislative session. Rep. Trisha Beck, D-Sandy, is also preparing legislation aimed at clarifying language in the state's four main prescription medication laws.

Recent prescription overdose deaths and a spate of pharmacy holdups in which robbers took painkillers but left the cash are signs of how powerful addiction is and are clear indication that lawmakers can no longer ignore a public safety problem that is not about to go away, the legislators said.

Physicians and law enforcement officers say they're on board.

Daryl Bingham, a Lindon police officer who has become known for his capacity to detect someone driving under the influence, said many people using prescription drugs don't know they can be as impaired on doctor-prescribed medication as someone using alcohol.

An older driver who Bingham found passed out in her car became incensed when he suggested that she might have a pill problem and that she might want to talk to her doctor about it. The state Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing database showed that in the past year three different doctors had prescribed 15,000 pills for various medical conditions.

"She had no alcohol or illegal substances on board, but she angrily said that (the pills) came from her doctor, they're safe and therefore it's all right," Bingham said, adding that people need to keep in mind that substances — controlled or illegal — can put someone under the influence without them knowing it.

"Driving under the influence of prescription drugs is still driving under the influence," he said.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS