Jamaica Gleaner

Painkiller fraud worry

J’cans forging doctors’ signatures to get highly addictive drugs

- Erica Virtue Sunday Gleaner Writer

SEVERAL JAMAICANS are forging doctors’ signatures to secure strong pain-relieving drugs such as morphine and pethidine, raising fear among pharmacist­s that the country could be facing a growing abuse of prescripti­on narcotics.

At a meeting last Thursday involving representa­tives of the National Health Fund (NHF) and the Jamaica Associatio­n of Private Pharmacy Owners (JAPPO), this was one of several issues raised.

Rohan McNellie, president of JAPPO, told The Sunday Gleaner that it is not unusual for pharmacies to call the doctors whose names are on the prescripti­ons only to be told that the doctors do not know the person trying to get the drugs.

DRUG-ABUSE CONCERNS

According to McNellie, the concern is that persons are abusing painkiller­s, which are highly addictive.

“We are asking the NHF to be the platform, so that people who are abusing drugs can be easily detected,” McNellie told The Sunday Gleaner.

He noted that addiction to narcotics is a worldwide problem and some Jamaicans are using improper means to secure them.

“It is not as prevalent in Jamaica, but we can’t escape it, because a lot of them (drugs) are highly addictive, so once you are on morphine or pethidine, the temptation is there for you to abuse it, and stock up,” said McNellie.

He said individual­s are moving across the country from pharmacy to pharmacy to secure the highly addictive drugs, while others use their doctors to get more than one prescripti­on legally.

“Sometimes they tell the doctors the prescripti­on is lost and another is written. Now you have two, so you just come back and fill that, or sometimes they just forge the doctors’ signatures,” added McNellie.

NO MONITORING SYSTEM

He noted that there is no islandwide linked system in Jamaica to spot the abuse, and argued that a single swipe card, or a one-stop card, would register patients and the medication­s they received from prescripti­ons.

“You can always get a new prescripti­on and go to pharmacy X or Y, because the pharmacies are not interlinke­d. But if you have a platform that will register you, anywhere you go and swipe the card it will register you as having it.

“We are looking at that, to help cut down on some of the fraudulent prescripti­ons for narcotics like morphine and pethidine,” declared McNellie.

He argued that the JAPPO is asking the NHF to introduce the technology, which would reduce the workload of pharmacist­s in doing the monitoring to spot the instances of fraud.

According to McNellie, the absence of the monitoring systems leave pharmacist­s with little options as it is only when they discover that a person has received multiple prescripti­ons over a short period of time do they express concern.

“Sometimes that is when you realise that

persons are buying the same drug at multiple pharmacies,” said McNellie.

Health Minister Dr Christophe­r Tufton told The Sunday Gleaner that the ministry is aware that prescripti­on fraud is taking place locally.

“Prescripti­on fraud is a global

challenge. About two to three per cent worldwide and about two per cent in Jamaica, I am told. So the NHF is redesignin­g its prescripti­on pads to make them more foolproof.

“The new pads will have institutio­n tracking, so, for example, the Kingston Public Hospital will be identified with prescripti­ons written from there,” said Tufton, as he argued that prescripti­on scrutiny is important.

“Enforcemen­t is important as some persons forge doctors’ signatures. Where there is uncertaint­y, validation is required. The most effective approach is electronic prescripti­on, which we are working on currently, but it requires legislativ­e changes,” added Tufton.

SCRUTINISE SIGNATURES

He argued that the pharmacist­s are an important part of the enforcemen­t, and they should scrutinise signatures carefully, as also the drugs prescribed and the pattern of the drugs prescribed.

Tufton said that there are some basic steps in trying to stem the tide of fraudulent prescripti­ons, including the issuance of the one-stop health cards that will replace the need for an NHF card, and a card for the Jamaica Drugs for the Elderly Programme.

 ??  ?? TUFTON
TUFTON
 ??  ?? MCNELLIE
MCNELLIE
 ??  ?? Oxycodone is the generic name for a range of opioid painkillin­g tablets.
Oxycodone is the generic name for a range of opioid painkillin­g tablets.

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