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| INTERNET
DRUGS |
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Literature
Review
The
Internet and Drug Availability
With
more than 200 million internet users in the United States and about
117 million individuals going online every week [1] the internet is a vital medium for communication,
entertainment, and commerce. The Pew Internet & American Life
Project reported in 2005 that 87% of 12-17 year old teenagers, and
73% of all adult Americans use the internet [2]. Just like
television, radio and print media, the internet provides the public
with information, entertainment, and advertisements. The internet
differs from all other media, however, in at least one important
way: it enables customers from around the world to shop with relative
anonymity in a global marketplace.
About
half of all adult Americans take a prescription medication regularly,
and one in four have used the internet to learn about prescription
medications. The majority of Americans have greater confidence in
their local pharmacy than internet-based pharmacies, and only about
4% report having purchased medications online [3].
In
addition to being a valuable source of information, communication,
and recreation, the internet also is being used to disseminate drug-related
information and sell controlled substances without prescriptions.
Drug information websites can emphasize the benefits of drug use
and provide information on how to manufacture, acquire and use drugs
such as marijuana, ecstasy and GHB. According to Gordon, Forman,
and Siatkowski, it is possible that use of the internet to acquire
drugs may be more prevalent among individuals who are non-dependent,
particularly so called “recreational drug users” and substance abusers
[4].
A
wide range of controlled substances is offered for sale online including
stimulants, steroids, sedatives, hallucinogens and marijuana [5]. No prescription
websites (NPWs) are online pharmacies that supply consumers with
controlled substances without a valid prescription. There are two
general categories of NPWs: Retail NPWs directly offer to sell opioid
medications without prescription while Portal NPWs provide multiple
links to Retail NPWs. Gordon, Forman, and Siatkowski found that
the majority of the NPWs identified in monitoring studies conducted
since 2003 were classified as Portals.
While
legitimate online pharmacies require a valid prescription from the
consumer’s physician, there are hundreds of NPWs that sell prescription
medications based solely on an online questionnaire, a telephone
interview, or a simple online order without any interaction with
a physician or other licensed healthcare professional. To assess
the relative availability of NPWs versus websites that offered addiction
health information (e.g. WebMD), during the first two weeks of August
2004, Gordon, Forman, and Siatkowski. conducted 27 Google searches
using a wide variety of opioid search terms. Two search terms -
no prescription Vicodin, and no prescription hydrocodone
–yielded 80-90% NPWs and no links to addiction health information
websites. On the other hand several opioid medications including
Fentanyl, Duragesic, buprenorphine, and Subutex – with and
without the no prescription prefix – yielded a majority of
addiction health information websites and few or no NPWs.
Beyond
qualitative examinations of typical NPWs, there has been no systematic
study of the content of current Retail NPWs. Forman and Block [6]
looked at fifty NPWs by examining links within the top three portal
NPWs identified during a search in June 2005. During the coding
process, any website found to be a legitimate retailer that only
sold medication to customers with a doctor’s prescription was eliminated
from consideration and replaced by the next linked website until
a total of fifty NPWs were reached. Nearly all (92%) of the NPWs
contained an implied legitimacy or credibility claim of some kind.
Over 80% of NPWs contained a medical legitimacy claim (82%). Fewer
NPWs displayed a retailer legitimacy claim (24%). 88% of NPWs accept
payment via one of the major credit cards and over half (52%) mention
delivery through a reputable carrier like FedEx or DHL. This provides
reassurance that working with credit card and shipping companies
is a viable mechanism for identifying ownership of NPWs and potentially
suspending their credit card contracts. Approximately half (52%)
of NPWs require some kind of online questionnaire to be filled out
by the patient; a much smaller percentage offer a telephone consultation,
either for free (8%) or fee (20%).
The
fluidity and semi-reality of cyberspace are ideally suited to illicit
drug transactions, creating a complex challenge for law enforcement,
policy makers and the general public [7].
Businesses wishing to circumvent the U.S. Controlled Substances
Act may do so by establishing multiple websites, in multiple countries,
under multiple online identities. For example, an NPW can be physically
located on a computer in Uzbekistan; registered to a business address
in Mexico; ship its drugs from Pakistan; deposit payments to a Cayman
Island bank - while the owner resides in Miami. Importantly, all
links in this online enterprise can be quickly dismantled and resurrected
under a new set of virtual identities.
The Global Marketplace and the Controlled Substances Act
The benefits of the internet apply equally to everyone, including
individuals who commit unlawful acts such as software piracy, virus
releases, identity theft, espionage, the sale of child pornography,
illegal weapons, and controlled substances. Online stores can be
hosted and registered anywhere in the world, advertising, selling,
and delivering products internationally with relative anonymity
and convenience – and with little regard for the laws of other
countries. The United States Controlled Substances Act (CSA) prohibits
the sale of Schedule I drugs such as marijuana, heroin, psilocybin,
crack cocaine, and ecstasy and regulates access to Schedule II-V
drugs including analgesics, sedatives, stimulants and steroids by
requiring a valid prescription from an appropriately licensed healthcare
professional [8]. Many countries
have drug policies that differ from those of the United States,
or have similar laws but less enforcement.
Individuals
wishing to sell drugs such as opioid medications to customers in
the United States can do so through NPWs registered and operated
outside the U.S. Such websites can be identified through internet
searches using terms such as Vicodin or no prescription. Internet search engines such as Google enable customers of
any age to purchase opioids from an international network of online
pharmacies. In 2004, the National Center on Addiction and Substance
Abuse (CASA) [9] identified
147 anchor web sites that offered sales of Schedules II –
IV controlled prescription drugs without a prescription during a
one-week investigation and only 10 websites that required prescription
verification. In a 2006 update to this study, CASA [10]
reported that the number of anchor sites selling Schedule II-IV
controlled prescription drugs had grown to 165, while the number
of sites requiring prescriptions had increased to only 20. Forman
[11]
published data indicating that the majority of links obtained in
a Google search using the term “no prescription codeine” yielded
websites offering to sell prescription opiates without a prescription.
In a later report, Forman [12]
noted that this availability remained consistent over a one-year
period, and that websites offering to sell steroids, sedatives,
stimulants, ketamine, coca leaves, marijuana, and a wide range of
other controlled substances were readily available. In December
2003, Google issued a press statement announcing it would
no longer accept advertisements from unlicensed, “rogue” pharmacies
though they would continue ranking and including NPWs in search
results [13,
14].
Because it is illegal to purchase prescription opioids and
other controlled substances without prescription, there is limited
data on the actual delivery rate of NPWs. However, the U.S. General
Accounting Office (GAO) conducted an investigation in which they
attempted to purchase prescription drugs without a prescription.
In total, the GAO investigators placed 90 orders for prescription
drugs without prescription; of these orders 45 (50%) were filled.
The GAO purchased a wide range of prescription medications, including
11 purchases of opioids. Of the 11 attempted purchases of opioid
medications (including hydrocodone and oxycodone), 10 (94%) were
delivered [15].
On July 30, 1999, U.S. Deputy Attorney General Ivan Fong testified
before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, Commerce
Committee, United States House of Representatives, that “…online
pharmacies allow consumers to purchase prescription drugs without
any pretense of a prescription” and that these websites introduce
“potential risks to public health and safety” [16].
A week later the White House issued Executive Order 13133 [17]
creating the “Working Group on Unlawful Conduct on the Internet”
leading to the publication of “The Electronic Frontier” [18]. The Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) subsequently published guidance [19] which specified four
conditions under which legal prescriptions can be issued over the
internet: a) A patient presents a medical complaint; b) A medical
history is obtained; c) A physical examination is performed;
and d) Some logical connection exists between the medical complaint,
the medical history, the physical examination, and the drug prescribed.
Prescriptions based on telephone interviews or online questionnaires
are not considered valid. In support of these guidelines, the American
Medical Association subsequently issued guidance for physicians
on internet prescribing that largely parallels the DEA’s position
[20].
Enforcement
Since 2001, the sale of controlled substances over the internet
has been cited in U.S. Justice Department reports [21, 22, 23]
and has led to criminal investigations for non-prescription drugs
such as ecstasy, gamma hydroxyl butyrate (GHB) and methamphetamines,
[24, 25, 26,
27] and the
illicit sale of prescription drugs online [28, 29, 30,
31, 32].
Similarly, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has provided
testimony [33],
and reports [34, 35, 36, 37] on the risks of online prescription
practices and recently, in conjunction with U.S. Customs, the FDA
participated in an investigation of illicit prescription drug sales
originating overseas [38].
On March 1, 2004, the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy (ONDCP) issued the 2004 National Drug Control Strategy
Update [39]
which for the first time described plans to monitor illicit internet
drug offers. Concurrent with the issuance of this strategy update,
ONDCP issued a press release [40]
entitled “U.S. Drug Prevention, Treatment, Enforcement Agencies
Take on ‘Doctor Shoppers,’ ‘Pill Mills’” and a fact sheet entitled
“Reducing Prescription Drug Abuse”[41] both of which announce initiatives to stop
illicit online prescription drug sales. Subsequently in 2005 and
2006 updates to the national drug control strategy, the ONDCP announced
that the focus of its efforts in halting prescription drug abuse
would be in preventing the diversion of prescription drug through
support of state-level Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs [42, 43].
The
issue of the abuse of prescription drugs and their sale over the
internet has also come under increasing scrutiny from the United
Nations International Narcotics Control Board (INCB). In recent
years, the INCB’s annual reports have continually noted the importance
of multinational efforts for stopping the diversion of prescription
drugs via the internet [44, 45]. In response, in late 2004 and
early 2005, the INCB convened two meetings of experts to discuss
possible solutions for the international challenge of shutting down
illegal internet pharmacies [46, 47]. Later in 2005, the United Nations Commission
on Narcotic Drugs passed a resolution calling for international
cooperation between member nations in order to end illegal internet
drug sales [48]. In one of its strongest warnings to date on the subject, the
INCB’s most recent 2006 annual report cautioned that the abuse and
trafficking of prescription drugs will soon surpass illicit drug
abuse [49]. Moreover,
the report states that the illegal sale of prescription drugs via
the internet continues “unabated,” and it recommends specific actions
to be undertaken both by member country governments and by the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in order to halt these sales [50].
Forman
and Block identified four potential “choke points” for NPW enforcement
efforts: a) search engines that list NPWs when searches are conducted;
b) credit card companies with which NPWs and their customers have
accounts; c) package delivery companies; and d) internet service
providers (ISP) where NPWs files are hosted [6].
Popular Media
Because
public awareness about the availability of opioid medications without
a prescription is increased by media reports, it is instructive
to consider media coverage of NPWs. Beginning in the fall of 2003,
the popular press began describing - and publicizing - the illicit
sale of prescription drugs over the internet. The earliest press
report on NPWs that we found was published on October 18, 2003,
in the New York Times[51] in an article describing a joint DEA/FDA taskforce targeting
“rogue online pharmacies” that sold prescription drugs without a
prescription. Two days later the Washington Post [52] released a five-part series detailing the results of a one-year
investigation into the availability of prescription drugs without
a prescription. A month after the Washington Post series, USA
Today [53] reported
on the “uncontrolled sale of controlled substances” over the internet
and then, in December 2003, news coverage about NPWs became widespread
with the Los Angeles Times [54], Philadelphia Daily News
[55], Boston
Herald [56], Miami Herald [57], Denver Post [58], San Jose Mercury News [59], and the Chicago Tribune
[60] all publishing
stories about the online availability of controlled substances without
a prescription. Additional media coverage has been given to police
investigations of operators of large internet pharmacies [61, 62, 63, 64]. More recently, the Partnership
for a Drug Free America launched an aggressive media campaign against
the abuse of prescription drugs in spring of 2006 [65].
Adolescent Abuse of Prescription Drugs
In
its 18th annual national study of teen substance use,
the Partnership for a Drug-Free America reported in 2006 that almost
one in five adolescents (19%) has abused prescription medications,
including Oxycontin and Vicodin [66].
This proportion is equal or higher than adolescent abuse of cocaine/crack,
ecstasy, methamphetamine, LSD, and heroin. Thirty-seven percent
of adolescents said they have close friends who have abused prescription
painkillers such as Vicodin, OxyContin, and Tylox, while 29% report
the same about Ritalin and Adderall. According to the study,
almost half of all teens believe that getting high from prescription
medications is “much safer” than street drugs, and 3 out of 10 teens
see nothing wrong with abusing prescription medicines once in a
while, and they believe that prescription drugs are not addictive.
Monitoring
the Future, another national annual survey of teen drug use
conducted by researchers at the University of Michigan, has also
recorded high levels of prescription drug abuse [67].
In 2006, survey results indicated that the annual prevalence rates
of Oxycontin use among 8th and 10th graders reached 2.6 percent
and 3.8 percent, respectively. These are the highest observed levels
to date. In contrast, the 2005 rates for 8th and 10th graders were
1.8 percent and 3.2 percent, respectively. Vicodin usage also has
a high prevalence rate, and its annual prevalence among 8th, 10th,
and 12th graders was 3 percent, 7 percent, and 9.7 percent, respectively.
This marked an increase from the rates of 2.6 percent, 5.9 percent
and 9.5 percent for 8th, 10th and 12th graders, respectively, in
2005.
Finally,
the National Survey on Drug Use and Health continues to report high
levels of abuse of psychotherapeutic drugs [68]. Though slight decreases were
reported in the usage of prescription-type psychotherapeutics in
comparison to 2004, current usage levels still remain well above
levels first reported in 2002 when the survey was significantly
revised. In 2005, 12 percent of youths ages 12-17 said they had
tried psychotherapeutics for non-medical use at least once in their
lifetime, including 1.1 percent reporting using Oxycontin, 3.0 percent
using tranquilizers, 4.6 percent using Vicodin, Lortab or Lorcet,
1.7 percent using hydrocodone, and 1.8 percent using codeine. Previously
from 2003-2004, lifetime use of Oxycontin had risen from 1.0 to
1.2 percent, lifetime use of Vicodin, Lortab or Lorcet had risen
from 4.5 to 5.1 percent, lifetime use of hydrocodone had risen from
1.6 to 1.7 percent, and codeine lifetime use had remained constant
at 2.1 percent [69].
Research on Internet Prescription Opioids
In
contrast with the many reports in the law enforcement literature
and popular press, there are few publications in the public health
or medical literature concerning the availability of prescription
opioids over the internet. In a Medline search conducted on June
28, 2004 using combinations of terms including “online,” “opioids,”
“internet,” and “narcotics” only one publication addressing the
availability of prescription opioids over the internet was found:
the principal investigator’s (Forman 2003) preliminary research
report. Since then the author collaborated in the production of
several research articles on the sale of prescription drugs over
the internet [70,
71]. This, and other searches conducted
using Medline and PsychINFO, identified general articles about online
pharmacy prescribing practices [72, 73,
74,
75, 76,
77], the internet
as a source of drug information [78,
79, 80, 81,
82,
83, 84,
85], and the
online sale of sexual performance enhancement drugs [86, 87,
88], but no
articles were found about websites selling prescription opioids
without a prescription. These reviews did find an article in a Swedish
language journal describing the online sale of hallucinogenic mushrooms
[89], a case report about a patient who became dependent on opium
poppies that were purchased online [90], and a case report about a patient
who overdosed on diet pills (phentermine) obtained online [91].
The
European Union has funded a project called the Psychonaut 2002 Project
which is searching the Internet for drug-related websites using
a controlled search methodology (psychonaut2002.org).
Its primary aim is to collect and analyze the information available
on these websites, and to develop an Early Warning System for professionals
providing information and suggestions concerning the emerging drug
markets, new drugs and new trends in drug use. This is a multi-site
research project involving 15 centers from nine European countries
and to date has analyzed more than 4.000 sites in 8 languages. Investigators
in this project have published multiple articles about the availability
of controlled substances on the internet [92, 93,
94, 95,
96, 97,
98] report having
one manuscript under review [99], and have presented their findings at two international scientific
conferences [100, 101].
In
addition, there is an overall lack of information about who is using
the internet to obtain NPOs. In the study conducted by Gordon, Forman,
and Siatkowski, one hundred adult drug dependent inpatients in a
private, residential treatment program participated in a semi-structured
interview from 2003 to 2004 regarding how they obtained their drugs.
Twenty-nine percent reported knowledge of the internet as a source
of drugs and 11% reported they had used the internet either to buy
drugs or locate a drug dealer. Among the respondents who knew the
internet was a drug source, reasons given for not using it were:
it was too expensive; the desired drug could not be obtained (e.g.
cocaine); and fear of being identified by authorities or other family
members using the same computer. The results of this preliminary
study suggest that the internet is becoming an increasingly important
source of controlled substances for some addicted individuals.
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