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DEA
Congressional Testimony
February 9, 2004
Statement
of
Thomas W. Raffanello
Special Agent In Charge, Miami Division
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration
Before the
U.S. House of Representatives
Committee on Government Reform
Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy
and Human Resources
February
9, 2004
"To
Do No Harm: Strategies For Preventing Prescription Drug Abuse"
Executive Summary
The rapid rise and widespread abuse of new generation high potency
prescription drugs like OxyContin® presents new strategic challenges in controlling
the longstanding problem of prescription abuse. In addition to traditional
methods of diversion such as forged and fraudulent prescriptions, pharmacy
theft, and doctor shopping, new technology has facilitated increased
diversion of drugs through “rogue” Internet pharmacies.
In response, DEA is creating a sophisticated infrastructure that will
use an encryption system known as Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) to
protect against fraudulent prescriptions as well as an advanced system
that will search the online public domain for illicit drug activity.
In addition, the 2001 DEA OxyContin® Action Plan has spurred a
flurry of joint enforcement operations with state and local agencies
to combat traditional methods of diversion. We also continue to work
with state officials on Prescription Monitoring Programs (PMP) to prevent
diversion at the point of sale and participate in numerous Joint Task
Forces nationwide to combat the abuse of pharmaceutical controlled
substances and health care fraud. Our approach to illicit diversion
of prescription drugs is reasonable and ensures adequate supplies of
pain medications are available for those with legitimate needs while
protecting the public from the consequences of abuse.
Chairman Souder and distinguished members of the Subcommittee, it is
a pleasure to appear before you today to discuss the challenge of prescription
drug abuse and the efforts of the Drug Enforcement Administration to
combat it. My name is Thomas Raffanello, and I am the Special Agent In
Charge of the Miami Division. Mr. Chairman, on behalf of Administrator
Karen P. Tandy, I would like to thank this subcommittee for its unwavering
support of the men and women of the DEA and its mission.
Introduction
DEA has primary
authority to prevent and prohibit the diversion and improper use of
controlled substances under the Controlled
Substances
Act (CSA), as well as the duty to ensure their availability for legitimate
medical and scientific needs. While the problem of prescription drug
abuse unfortunately is not a new one, its urgency has been heightened
by a new generation of high dose, extended release, opioid pain medications.
Along with greatly increased effectiveness to treat pain, these drugs
also offer equally increased risk of abuse and diversion that force a
delicate balance for medical and health professionals and law enforcement
personnel. OxyContin®, Duragesic® and Actiq® are examples
of this type of licit drug. The potency, purity and quantity of their
active ingredients are stronger and more dangerous than ever before,
tempting addiction by legitimate patients and offering a high potential
for deliberate abuse by those seeking narcotic drugs. In addition, these
powerful drugs provide strong incentives for diversion by both new means
such as “rogue” Internet pharmacies and older challenges
such as improper prescriptions written for profit. The DEA is committed
to aggressively address and counter the risks posed solely by this new
generation of prescription drugs and their abuse.
Personifying a Different Type of Drug Abuser
Prescription drugs
can be an easy and insidious form of abuse for a variety of reasons.
Abusers know that prescription drugs
are not adulterated
and have standardized, precise dosages. Abusers believe that “If
my doctor can prescribe it for me, it can’t be bad.” Many
think that if the user does not inject the drug, he or she is not truly
a drug abuser. Controlled substances obtained via prescriptions are frequently
covered by health insurance or Medicaid. Finally, prescription drugs
are readily available through open commercial markets.
Opiates in pill
form have historically been among the most abused prescription drugs,
especially hydrocodone, hydromorphone,
and oxycodone. Diverted
from legitimate channels, these drugs can substitute for illicit narcotics
and are frequently trafficked on the street by individuals or structured
organizations. As far back as the 1970s, hydromorphone-based Dilaudid® was
known on the street as “drug store heroin.”
Increasing Abuse
of Controlled Release and Sustained Release Opiates Prescription drug
abuse has recently escalated to a new level of concern with the development
of opiate-based pain killers
designed for controlled
or sustained release. These products pose special challenges to law enforcement.
It is easy to see why when you consider that OxyContin® contains
two to sixteen times the dosage of oxycodone as its well known predecessor
Percodan®.
OxyContin® is also the most widely known example of an abused prescription
drug, and its diversion has increased dramatically since its introduction
to the market. OxyContin® is a valuable and efficient pain management
drug when properly prescribed and used. At the same time, however, its
popularity for abuse skyrocketed when word made its way to the street
that manipulating this powerful drug can bring heroin-like effects. DEA
has never witnessed such a rapid increase in the abuse and diversion
of a pharmaceutical drug product.
Problems with OxyContin® diversion occurred relatively soon after
its initial marketing. By 2000, DEA had noted a dramatic increase in
its illicit availability and abuse. Available data for the following
year indicated that OxyContin® reached record levels of diversion
and abuse never before seen. In 2001, the DEA’s National Forensic
Laboratory Information System (NFLIS) reported double the amount of drug
exhibits analyzed by state and local forensic laboratories contained
oxycodone in comparison to 2000. OxyContin® diversion first emerged
as an issue in rural areas of the eastern United States, particularly
in parts of Appalachia and New England, and became so prevalent it is
known as “hillbilly heroin.” Its popularity among prescription
drug abusers spread quickly, and it was not long before OxyContin® abuse
and diversion widened to other parts of the country, including Florida.
OxyContin® abuse has been so prevalent in the Florida Panhandle
and the Jacksonville area that DEA, the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI), the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the Florida Attorney
General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, the Florida Department of
Financial Services and the Bay County Sheriff’s Office formed the
North Florida Health Care Task Force (HCTF) in 2001. The Task Force combats
abuse of pharmaceutical controlled substances and health care fraud.
HCTF recently created an OxyContin® focus group to concentrate on
the diversion of OxyContin® in the Florida Panhandle area.
Investigative successes are having an impact, but also highlight the
extent of the problem of prescription drug abuse. In September 2002,
the Citrus County Sheriff’s Office arrested the owner and pharmacist
of an Inverness, Florida pharmacy for diverting several hundred OxyContin® pills
from his pharmacy each week. A subsequent DEA investigation and audit
revealed shortages of approximately 90,000 pills of diverted drugs
in just ten months, including approximately 36,000 tablets of oxycodone
products and 54,000 tablets of hydrocodone products. The pharmacist
was recently sentenced to five years imprisonment. More recently, the
HCTF apprehended a Panama City, Florida physician on several counts
of illegal distribution of controlled substances, including distribution
resulting in death. Our enforcement operations have also had a positive
effect on public awareness. The DEA Tallahassee Resident Office has
responded to numerous telephone calls, ranging from inquiries as to
where to obtain substance abuse treatment to physicians asking how
to handle the influx of patients requesting OxyContin® prescriptions.
Methods of Diversion
The popularity of
OxyContin® and other drugs of abuse have also
inspired a wide range of diversion methods, some new and some old. Practitioners
and pharmacists illegally or indiscriminately prescribe or dispense OxyContin® for
a profit. Addicts and dealers steal drugs through pharmacy thefts and
in-transit hijackings. Forged or fraudulent prescriptions are common
occurrences, as are patients who claim false medical needs. “Doctor
Shopping” abusers travel from doctor to doctor to find an easy
mark who will readily write prescriptions or who can be duped. Foreign
diversion and smuggling of contraband drugs into the United States contributes
to the problem. And perhaps of the greatest concern, the Internet has
become a virtual wild west bazaar for “spam” emails and website
advertisements that sell controlled substances with little or no oversight
that the drugs are sold for legitimate medical reasons. At times, multiple
methods of diversion occur simultaneously. In Sarasota, Florida, a physician
recently was arrested for writing prescriptions for controlled substances
to known drug dealers and abusers including Dilaudid® and OxyContin®.
The doctor saw as many as 80 patients daily and charged $250.00 for an
initial office visit and $150.00 for follow-up appointments. During the
search of the physician’s office, DEA and local law enforcement
seized approximately 25,000 doses of controlled substances including
large quantities of oxycodone, methadone and hydrocodone.
Preventing Diversion
The OxyContin® Action
Plan
In response to
growing concern among federal, state and local officials about the
dramatic increase in the illicit availability
and abuse of
OxyContin®, the DEA initiated an OxyContin® Action Plan in May
2001 as a comprehensive effort to prevent diversion and abuse of the
drug. The initiative is not intended to impact the availability of OxyContin® for
legitimate medical use.
The OxyContin® Action Plan has four main goals: First, enhance
coordination of enforcement and intelligence programs with other federal,
state, and local agencies to target individuals and organizations involved
in the illegal sale and abuse of OxyContin®. Second, use the full
range of regulatory and administrative authorities to make it more difficult
for abusers to obtain OxyContin®. The DEA does this by closely monitoring
the quota of oxycodone available to manufacturers, continuing to work
closely with the Department of Health and Human Services to reduce the
abuse of reformulated OxyContinâ by injection, and continuing our
efforts to improve physician education on treatment of pain and recognition
of addiction. Third, increase cooperative efforts with the pharmaceutical
industry. Fourth, advance national outreach to educate the public, the
healthcare industry, schools and state and local governments on the dangers
related to the abuse and diversion of OxyContin®.
Since implementation
of the OxyContin® Action Plan, DEA has initiated
over 400 OxyContin® investigations, resulting in the arrest of approximately
600 individuals. Sixty percent of the cases initiated involved professionals
such as doctors and pharmacists. Doctor shoppers, forgers, and individuals
arrested for armed robberies and burglaries accounted for the remaining
forty percent of the investigations.
The plan’s impact locally is best illustrated by the recent arrest
of a physician in Melbourne, Florida who was charged in state court with
eleven counts related to trafficking large quantities of OxyContin® and
other controlled substances. The investigation further revealed that
office employees were operating a drug ring using the physician’s
prescriptions. To date, forty people have been arrested for illegal drug
trafficking as a result of this investigation.
Prescription Drug Monitoring The DEA is also
working with states on Prescription Monitoring Programs (PMP) to prevent
diversion at the state level.
PMPs capture information
regarding prescriptions electronically at the “point of sale,” usually
the pharmacy. The information is transmitted to a state agency to identify
doctor shoppers and/or other evidence of diversion. Sixteen states have
active PMPs and another five states have partial or pending programs.
The General Accounting Office concluded in a 2002 study that PMPs “… have
aided investigators and helped to reduce doctor shopping …” For
the past two years, Congress has appropriated funds for states to initiate
and expand PMPs. Florida has applied for an enhancement grant of $350,000
to augment an initial grant beginning in January 2005. Use of these funds
is contingent upon the passage of legislation during Florida’s
current legislative session.
Internet Initiatives
Although the Internet
has fostered the diversion of controlled substances and the inappropriate
use of other drugs, it
can also be used as a tool
to reduce prescription fraud. As part of an overall modernization effort,
DEA is developing regulations that will allow physicians to use the Internet
to securely transmit prescriptions from their offices to the patient’s
pharmacy. These regulations will specify standards to electronically
transmit prescriptions to foil prescriptions from being altered and prevent
office staff from making fraudulent telephone authorizations on behalf
of physicians. DEA anticipates that the regulations will be finalized
this year with procedures being implemented in 2005.
DEA is also examining
ways to deal with the recent rapid proliferation of “rogue” Internet pharmacies. During 2004, DEA intends
to improve our capacity to identify illicit operations and better restrict
internet sales of controlled substances through the use of a new and
advanced system that will search the online public domain for illicit
drug activity. We anticipate receiving $2.1 million and more than 60
diversion and support positions dedicated to the Internet diversion problem
under DEA’s Fiscal Year 2004 budget. We also plan to work with
the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and other agencies to better educate
the public and work with those companies that facilitate the illegal
sale of controlled substances including commercial freight carriers,
credit card companies and Internet search engines.
Understanding Pain Management
As I mentioned earlier,
high-dose opiates can be an important and legitimate means of pain
relief. In striking the delicate
balance between preventing
abuse and facilitating patient care, the DEA believes that physician
education and cooperation with medical groups is essential. The DEA agrees
with 21 health care organizations who endorsed a balanced approach to
the use of pain medications like OxyContin®. We are continuing to
work with organizations such as Last Acts and the University of Wisconsin
Pain and Policy Studies Group to formulate Frequently Asked Questions
(FAQs) for physicians and investigators alike to clarify appropriate
prescribing issues. These FAQs will be made available to interested parties
through DEA’s website and other media. The DEA is also exploring
continuing medical education opportunities for physicians that will become
electronically available when a physician applies for, or renews, a DEA
registration.
Conclusion
The DEA is committed
to protecting the American public’s health
and safety from the serious consequences of abuse of legal pain relief
for life destroying illegal purposes. Initiatives like the OxyContin® Action
Plan, PMPs, additional funding and positions for DEA diversion investigations,
and our new Internet search system will enhance the DEA’s enforcement
efforts to stop the flow of prescription drugs from reaching our streets
illegally.
I would be happy to answer any questions the Subcommittee may have.
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