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Testimony before the U.S. Senate
Testimony
of Joseph A. Califano, Jr., Chairman and President, National Center
on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, and former
Secretary, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, New York,
New York
U.S.
Senate Committee on the Judiciary
May
16, 2007
Thank you, Mr.
Chairman, for the invitation to testify today. The National Center
on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University has studied
the Nation’s problem of controlled prescription drug abuse
and has documented for 4 consecutive years the Internet availability
of these drugs.
In 2005, CASA
released its landmark report, ‘‘Under the Counter: The
Diversion and Abuse of Controlled Prescription Drugs in the U.S.’’
This report revealed that our Nation is in the throes
of a growing epidemic of controlled prescription drug abuse involving
opioids like OxyContin and Vicodin, depressants like Valium and
Xanax, and stimulants like Ritalin and Adderall. From 1992 to 2002,
prescriptions written for such controlled drugs increased more than
150 percent, 12 times the rate of increase in our population and
almost 3 times the rate of increase in prescriptions written for
all other drugs.
Mirroring this
increase in prescriptions has been an increase in the abuse of these
drugs. From 1992 to 2003, the overall number of Americans abusing
controlled prescription drugs rose 94 percent, 7 times faster than
the increase in the U.S. population. The number of 12- to 17-year-olds
who abused controlled prescription drugs jumped 212 percent, more
than triple.
In 2003, the
number of Americans who abused controlled prescription drugs exceeded
as you said, Mr. Chairman, the combined number abusing cocaine and
all other illegal drugs except marijuana, and they are on course
to exceed abuse of marijuana on the track they are on. Abuse of
controlled prescription drugs has grown at a rate twice that of
marijuana abuse, 5 times that of cocaine abuse, 60 times that of
heroin abuse.
Particularly
troubling are the implications for our children. From 1992 to 2002,
new abuse of prescription opioids among 12- to 17- year-olds was
up an astounding 542 percent, more than 4 times the rate of increase
among adults. In 2003, nearly 1 in 10 12- to 17- year-olds abused
at least one controlled prescription drug; for 83 percent of them,
that drug was an opioid. Teens who abuse controlled prescription
drugs are twice as likely to use alcohol, 5 times likelier to use
marijuana, 12 times likelier to use heroin, 15 times likelier to
use Ecstasy, and 21 times likelier to use cocaine, compared to teens
who do not abuse such drugs.
In 2005, 15.2
million Americans abused these drugs including more than 2 million
teens. The explosion in the prescription of addictive opioids, depressants
and stimulants has, for many children, made their parents’
medicine cabinet a greater threat than the illegal street drug dealer.
But, perhaps the most wide open substance supermarket in the world
is the Internet. The Internet has become a pharmaceutical candy
store, its shelves stacked with an array of
addictive prescription drugs offering a high to any kid with a credit
card at the click of a mouse.
For 4 years
now, at CASA, in collaboration with Beau Deitl & Associates,
we have been tracking online access to controlled prescription drugs.
In the first quarter of each year, we have devoted
210 hours to documenting the number of Internet sites advertising
and dispensing controlled drugs. These findings are a snapshot of
availability at a given point in time and show trends from year
to year. They do not capture the total number of sites advertising
or selling controlled prescription drugs online, which may be many
times the numbers I am using now.
Today CASA is
releasing the fourth in its annual series of reports entitled ‘‘
‘You’ve Got Drugs!’ IV: Prescription Drug Pushers
on the Internet.’’ Here are the report’s disturbing
findings. From
2006 to 2007, there has been a 70-percent increase in the number
of sites advertising or selling controlled prescription drugs over
the Internet, from 342 to 581; a 135-percent increase in the number
of sites advertising controlled prescription drugs; a 7-percent
increase in the number of sites selling controlled prescription
drugs. Eighty-four percent of the sites selling controlled prescription
drugs do not require a prescription from the patient’s physician,
and most of the
remaining 16 percent of sites that ask for a prescription simply
ask that it be faxed, allowing a customer to forge it or use the
same prescription many times to load up on these drugs.
There are no
controls—no controls—to stop the sale of these drugs
to children. Over the 4-year course of our analysis, the number
of selling sites has climbed from 154 to 187. Since there are no
controls preventing sale of these drugs to children, all a child
needs is a credit card number and access to a computer and ‘‘You’ve
Got Drugs!’’ Efforts to crack down on this illegal trafficking
are complicated by outdated Federal law written before the Internet
and
inadequate State laws.
There is a mechanism
in place for certifying Internet pharmacy practice sites. It is
the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy, which verifies Internet
pharmacy practice sites. However, the process is voluntary. Of the
187 sites found selling in 2007, only two were certified.
The widespread
threat to the public health demands that Congress now take action
to: clarify Federal law to prohibit the sale or purchase of controlled
prescription drugs online without an original prescription issued
by a DEA-certified physician based on a physical examination and
evaluation; and require certification of online pharmacies to assure
that they meet rigorous standards of professional practice.
The Feinstein-Sessions
bill is a step in the right direction and an important step. We
have a few suggestions to strengthen it that we can discuss with
your staff, but we really applaud, Senator Feinstein and Senator
Sessions, what you have done in introducing this
bill.
The report we
are releasing today makes other recommendations that I hope you
will consider.
Mr. Chairman,
just in closing, substance abuse and addiction— involving
prescription drugs, alcohol, nicotine, all of it—is the Nation’s
most serious domestic problem. It is implicated in most crimes,
most killing and crippling illnesses, most domestic violence, most
child abuse, most homelessness, poverty, most teen pregnancy, and
the wildfire spread of AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
I have titled my book on this subject ‘‘High Society,’’
and I will give you one simple fact. We Americans are 4 percent
of the world’s population; we consume two-thirds of the world’s
illegal drugs.
This problem
is all about kids. A kid who gets through age 21 without smoking,
using illegal drugs, or abusing prescription drugs or alcohol is
virtually certain never to do so. Over the past 12 years, the fastest
growing drug abuse among our Nation’s children involves prescription
drugs. I a
[The prepared statement of Mr. Califano appears as a submission
for the record.]
Chairman LEAHY.
Thank you very much, and the report will be part of the record.
Professor Philip
Heymann is currently the James Barr Ames Professor of Law at the
Harvard University Law School. Professor Heymann has served at high
levels in both the State and Justice Departments during the Kennedy,
Johnson, Carter, and Clinton administrations, including serving
as the Deputy Attorney General for the Justice Department from 1993
to 1994. He served as the Assistant Attorney General in charge of
the Criminal Division from 1978 to 1981. He spent a lot of time
in this room, I might add he was Acting Administrator of the State
Department’s Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs, Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of International Organizations,
and numerous other high-level positions in Government. He was also
a former associate prosecutor and consultant on the Watergate Task
Force. He also helped establish the Keep Internet and Neighborhoods
Safe project and developed proposals to reduce illegal Internet
prescription drug sales to youth. He is a graduate of Yale University
and Harvard Law School and clerked for former Supreme Court Justice
John
Harlan.
Professor, the
floor is yours. We applaud the work of this Committee to curb the
availability of these drugs. We will do anything to help.
We are submitting
our report along with my statement for the record, and we really
appreciate, Senator Leahy, you and this Committee attending to this
incredibly important problem.
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