Doctor Shopping

Picture a drug abuser and you may think of a bum in ragged clothes. There is a new kind of abuser in town. Middle to upper class women and men addicted to prescription painkillers.

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These abusers do not purchase their drugs from pushers in an alley– they doctor shop. They go from one doctor to another, describing their symptoms, asking for prescriptions for oxycodone, hydrocodone, viocodin, and percocet.

These individuals my not know that law enforcement does not consider doctor shopping harmless or a victimless crime. It is a felony and can lead to five years in prison.

Abuse of prescription drugs can start with a real need. Patients can become dependent on painkillers prescribed after surgery or serious injury. Their own physicians can keep prescribing the medications by accident or inattention. When that doctor finally refuses to continue the medication, the patient shifts to another — or several other – doctors, asking for pain relief medication.

Several states have instituted PDMPs (Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs). These programs allow pharmacies and physicians to cross check patients and prescriptions and identify – called red flagging – individuals who are filling multiple prescriptions for the same medications. Red-flagged individuals are monitored carefully and allowed to use only one pharmacy and one doctor.

Hospital emergency departments are also involved in doctor shopping because patients go in, apparently in acute pain, demanding relief. The emergency physician has no relationship or history with the patient and is very likely to prescribe at least a small amount of painkillers.

As more medical records are computerized, doctor shopping should become increasingly difficult.

 

Looking at Prescription Medicines

Prescription medicines incorporate a great number of medications for an entire spectrum of diseases and ailments. They have a requirement different than many medications that are available “over the counter.” They have to be prescribed by a physician. The reason for this is that they are a licensed medicine regulated by legislation and rules. The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act is one piece of legislation that defines the particulars of a prescription. A professional has to have special licensing in order to write a script for a prescription medicine. The professionals are veterinarians, dentists, optometrists, and medical practitioners.

The Food and Drug Administration has the responsibility to implement the laws and legislation that is passed regarding medicines prescribed by physicians. The federal Prescription Drug Marketing Act of 1987 protects the safety and effectiveness of the medicines. FDA mandates the use of a legend so that random sales do not happen and something is not sold without a prescription. The legend can be simple and usually only says, “Rx only.”

Rx-only drugs or legend drugs are also names used to distinguish between prescription and non-prescription medicines. Today, there are alternative methods of getting prescription medicines such as ordering them from some other country than the United States. The individual who chooses to order via the Internet will encounter companies that are not regulated by the FDA or do not come from U.S. licensed pharmacies. So this presents a new set of issues which one must be mindful of.

Prescription medicines are generally used to treat problematic systems which an individual has. They alleviate symptoms first and then it may eliminate the disease or sickness. Today with the easy access of information on the Internet, laypeople have the responsibility to question the doctor and make sure he or she is making the best decision for the physical ailment.