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| INTERNET
DRUGS |
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Policy
White Paper
“Keep Internet Neighborhoods Safe”
Preventing
the Illegal Internet Sales of Controlled Substances to Youth
In response to growing evidence that increasing numbers of internet
websites offer to sell controlled substances without prescription,
Drug Strategies; the Treatment Research Institute at the University
of Pennsylvania; the Center for International Criminal Justice and
the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School;
and the Weill Medical Center at Cornell University created a Public-Private
Partnership in January 2005 to address the problem of drug trafficking
over the internet of prescription narcotics without prescription.
Since then, this core group has brought together leaders of companies
that play key roles in internet commerce. These include Internet
Service Providers (ISPs), such as Verizon Online; AOL; AT&T,
Earthlink; Microsoft, and Comcast; search engines, such as Google
and Yahoo; banks, such as UBS and JP Morgan Chase; credit card companies,
such as Mastercard, Visa and Paypal; and private carriers, such
as UPS, DHL and Fed Ex. We have also included officials of key
U.S. government agencies, such as the National Institute on Drug
Abuse, the Department of Justice, the Drug Enforcement Administration,
Customs and Border Protection, the Department of State, and the
U.S. member of the United Nations International Narcotics Control
Board.
Our collaborative effort is informed by academic, legal, and technology
experts as well as leaders in public education through the media,
such as the Partnership for a Drug Free America. The goal is to
develop new strategies to curtail Internet drug trafficking to youth,
taking into consideration such issues as Internet regulation, online
advertising, payment transfers, delivery services, U.S. and international
law as well as prevention initiatives.
This
initiative, which we named “Keep Internet Neighborhoods Safe (KINS),”
has involved more than fifty participants and has held six plenary
meetings at Harvard Law School and several specialized meetings
with government officials and private company executives in Washington,
D.C. since early 2005. On July 6-7, 2006, we convened a major conference
at Harvard to discuss potential strategies to curtail illegal Internet
sales of controlled substances to youth by targeting key points
of control. (The conference agenda and the names of participants
are attached in Appendix A.) We are grateful for the help of all
those involved in this important initiative: leaders from the private
sector as well as from key government agencies generously contributed
their time and their best advice. The resulting white paper does
not represent a group consensus but rather the views of the core
organizing group (Drug Strategies, Harvard Law School, Weill Medical
Center and the Treatment Research Institute) built upon the two
years of research and meetings.
Why
We Are Concerned
1.
Sales of Psychoactive Prescription Drugs over the Internet is Becoming
a Major Enterprise, Presenting New Challenges to Drug Abuse Prevention
and Treatment.
Adolescent
use of highly addictive prescription opioid drugs, such as Vicodin
and Oxycontin; sedatives, such as Ambien; and tranquilizers, such
as Valium and Xanax, without prescription is increasing, according
to annual national surveys. Despite the encouraging news that past
month illicit drug use overall has declined 19% among youth ages
12 to 17 since 2001, there has been a significant increase in adolescent
non-medical use of addictive prescription drugs. These drugs are
widely advertised and sold over the Internet without prescription.
Ready availability through “non-prescription websites (NPWs)” may
be one important contributing factor to increasing adolescent use
of these drugs.
The
global reach of the Internet now makes it as easy for an adolescent
to buy drugs as it is to buy a book or CD with a credit card, PayPal,
or even cash. Some sites provide drugs initially free without immediate
payment. Unlike many scams on the Internet, there is evidence that
these drugs of abuse are real, potent, and actually delivered to
buyers. (Research conducted by Dr. A. Thomas McLellan and his colleague
Dr. Robert Forman at the Treatment Research Institute as well as
by the Government Accounting Office cited in the Bibliography confirm
that the psychoactive drugs delivered over the internet are not
fake substances.) Of particular concern is the role that NPWs might
play in initiating opioid and other non-medical drug use among adolescents,
the age group that most frequently uses the Internet. For example,
a sixth grader researching a school paper might enter the term “Vicodin”
in a major search engine, like Google or Yahoo, and see a majority
of the retrieved websites aggressively advertising to sell these
drugs without prescription (Forman 2003, Forman 2006).
2.
Prevalence of Adolescent Substance Abuse in the United States.
Two
major federally funded annual surveys provide information on adolescent
drug, alcohol and tobacco use nationwide. Monitoring the Future
(MTF), begun in 1975, interviews approximately 50,000 8th,
10th, and 12th grade students (Johnston et
al 2005). The National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), begun
in 1971, interviews approximately 70,000 randomly selected individuals
aged 12 and older in order to provide national and state-level estimates
of past month, past year, and lifetime drug, alcohol and tobacco
use (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration 2006).
The NSDUH collects data by age group (12-17; 18-25; 26 and older)
rather than by grade level.
Both
national surveys confirm that non-medical drug use is pervasive
among American adolescents. According to MTF, 48 percent of 12th
graders, 36 percent of 10th graders and 21 percent of
8th graders reported in 2006 that they had used an illicit
drug at least once in their lifetime (Johnston et al 2006). The
NSDUH reported that 10 percent of young people ages 12-17 (over
2.5 million adolescents) said they had used an illicit drug in the
month prior to the survey, and 1.2 million youth ages 12-17 said
they had abused or were dependent on an illicit drug at some point
during the previous year (SAMHSA 2006). In 2005, a majority (52
percent) of the approximately 2.9 million persons (age 12 and over)
who reported using an illicit drug for the first time within the
year prior to the survey were younger than age 18 when they first
used (SAMHSA 2006).
The
MTF survey reported that there was a 23.1 percent decline in past
month use of any illicit drug by 8th, 10th,
and 12th graders combined between 2001 and 2006. This
trend is driven largely by decreasing rates of marijuana use among
these students: since 2001, past month marijuana use has fallen
by 24.7 (Johnston et al 2006). The NSDUH reported that between
2002 and 2005, past month marijuana use by males ages 12 to 17 declined
(9.1 percent in 2002, 8.6 percent in 2003, 8.1 percent in 2004,
and 7.5 in 2005), as did usage levels for female youths (7.2, 7.2,
7.1, and 6.2 percent, respectively) during the same time period.
The NSDUH survey also found that current rates of illicit drug use
among teens in 2005 varied significantly by major racial/ethnic
groups. Native American or Alaska Native youths reported the highest
rates (19.2 percent), compared to 9.7 percent for youths identified
with two or more races. White youths reported 10.1 percent; Hispanic
youths, 9.4 percent; African-American youths, 11 percent, and Asian
youths, 3.3 percent. In 2005, approximately 2.1 million people reported
using marijuana for the first time within the past year (SAMHSA
2006).
The
NSDUH also found about the same number of recent marijuana initiates
between 2004 and 2005. Of the roughly 2.1 million recent marijuana
initiates, 54 percent were younger than age 18. The survey reported
that about 872,000 people used cocaine for the first time within
the past 12 months. About one-third of these recent cocaine initiates
were under 18 when they first used.
In
2005, an estimated 2.5 million people aged 12 or older reported
using psychoactive drugs without prescription for the first time
in the year prior to the survey. (Of this group, 850,000 were youth
ages 12-17 and 847,000 were young adults ages 18-25.) With regard
to prescription pain killers, 2.2 million people (age 12 and over)
reported first time use without prescription. In addition, non-prescribed
first time use of tranquilizers was reported by 1.3 million people;
similar use of stimulants by 647,000 people and sedatives by 247,000.
The number of new non-medical users of Oxycontin was 526,000, with
an average age at first use of 26.3 years.
3.
Increasing Non-prescription Use of Addictive Prescription Drugs
by Youth.
Non-prescription
use of opioids, sedatives and tranquilizers by adolescents is increasing.
Of particular concern is the high rate of Oxycontin and Vicodin
use among adolescents (Johnston et al 2005). Physicians generally
prescribe these opiates to relieve severe pain, but they now are
becoming widely used for non-medical purposes by young people.
The 2006 MTF survey reported that 4.3 percent of 12th
graders, 3.8 percent of 10th graders, and 2.6 percent
of 8th graders said they used Oxycontin at least once
in the past year. It is important to note that questions regarding
Oxycontin and Vicodin use were not added to MTF until 2002 so that
earlier information on the prevalence of adolescent non-medical
use of these drugs is not available. Even higher rates of annual
use were reported in 2006 for Vicodin: 9.7 percent of 12th
graders, 7.0 percent of 10th graders, and 3.0 percent
of 8th graders said they used Vicodin without prescription
in the previous year. (In 2006, 66.5 percent of 12th
graders reported alcohol use and 31.5 percent reported marijuana
use.) Vicodin is now the second most widely reported drug used
by 12th graders excluding tobacco and alcohol). Heroin,
on the other hand, has an annual prevalence rate of less than 1
percent among 12th, 10th, and 8th
graders (Johnston et al 2006).
The NSDUH reported that in 2005, 11.9 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 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 (SAMHSA 2006). Lifetime use of Oxycontin
for young adults ages 18-25 rose from 3.6 percent in 2003 to 5.0
percent in 2005. During the same time period, lifetime use of Vicodin,
Lortab, or Lorcent rose from 15.0% to 17.7% and hydrocodone use
rose from 6.6% to 7.6% (SAMSHA 2005, 2006).
According
to MTF, students also reported significant rates of non-prescription
use of sedatives and tranquilizers. The annual MTF survey asks only
12th graders about sedative use: in 2006, 6.6 percent
of 12th graders reported using non-prescribed sedatives
in the previous year, more than double the rate reported in 1992
(2.8 percent). Similar increases in non-prescribed use of tranquilizers
were reported by 12th graders (6.6 percent in 2006 compared
to 2.8 percent in 1992) (Johnston et al 2006).
Nearly
one in five teens (19 percent) report non-medical use of prescription
medications, according
to a nationwide survey by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America
(PDFA 2005). As for prescription painkillers,
around 18 percent of teenagers reported using Vicodin, and
one in ten reported using Oxycontin. More than one third of teenagers
(37 percent) said they have close friends who have used prescription
painkillers such as Vicodin, Oxycontin and Tylox, without prescription.
One in 10 teenagers, or 2.3 million young people, have tried prescription
stimulants, such as Ritalin or Adderall without a prescription (PDFA
2005).
A
2003 study conducted via a web-based survey examined non-medical
use of prescription drugs in a sample of 1,017 public school students
ages 10-18 in the Detroit metropolitan area (Boyd et al 2006).
The study found that 22 percent of girls and 10 percent of boys
reported non-medical use of a pain medication at least once in their
lifetime, while 15 percent of girls and 7 percent of boys reported
such use within the year prior to the survey. The students reported
that the single largest source for drugs was family members, followed
by friends and dealers. The study did not include any youths who
had obtained prescription drugs on the Internet. Furthermore, a
2006 study investigating non-medical use of prescription medications
among undergraduate students found that college men are more likely
than women to obtain prescription opioid medications for non-medical
use from peer sources, while women are more likely to get them from
family members (McCabe, Teter and Boyd 2006).
The
NSDUH is the most recent source of information on the demographic
characteristics of adolescents in drug treatment nationwide. The
survey reports that in 2004, 276,000 youth ages 12-17 received treatment
for non-medical use of an illicit drug during the previous year
(SAMHSA
2006). Non-medical use of prescription drugs
is a reason why many youth are in treatment:: 15% of youths who
received treatment reported use of pain relievers, 7% reported use
of tranquilizers, and 3% reported use of sedatives.
4.
Perceptions of Non-Medical Prescription Drug Use among Adolescents.
According
to a 2005 survey by the Partnership for a Drug Free America, two
in five teens, or around 9.4 million, said they believe that getting
high from prescription medications is “much safer” than street drugs
(PDFA 2005). Thirty one percent of adolescents, or 7.3 million,
believe there’s “nothing wrong” with using prescription drugs without
a prescription “once in a while”. Nearly three out of 10, or 6.8
million, believe that prescription painkillers, even if taken without
a prescription, are not addictive. The majority of teens (13.4
million) agreed that prescription drugs are easier to get than illegal
street drugs, and that prescription painkillers are “available everywhere”.
5.
Ease of Finding Internet Drug Pharmacies.
With
more than 200 million Internet users in the United States, the web
is a vital medium for communication, entertainment, and commerce
(Clickz Network Statistics 2006). The Pew Internet & American
Life Project reported that 87% of 12-17 year olds, and 82 percent
of 18-24 year old go online at least monthly (Fox 2005). Similarly,
43 percent of teens and two-thirds of adult internet users go online
to make purchases, and a large number of adults (79 percent) use
the internet to look for health and medical information (Fox and
Madden 2005, Lenart 2004). The digital divide between African-Americans,
Hispanics and whites appears to be closing. A 2006 Pew national
survey reports that 74 percent of whites, 61 percent of African-Americans
and 80 percent of English-speaking Hispanic-Americans go on-line
(Marriott 2006). In 1998, a Pew survey found that 42 percent of
whites and 23 percent of African-Americans used the Internet.
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 percent report having purchased medications online (Fox
2004). A wide range of controlled substances is offered for sale
online including stimulants, steroids, sedatives, hallucinogens
and marijuana (SAMHSA 2003). In
addition to the many legitimate online pharmacies that operate in
accordance with state and federal laws, hundreds of websites have
appeared offering to sell controlled substances such as Vicodin
and Oxycontin without prescription. 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. The majority of the NPWs identified
in monitoring studies conducted since 2003 were classified as Portals
(Gordon et al 2006).
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 et al (2006) 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 percent
NPWs and no links to addiction health information websites. On
the other hand, searches for 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 (In
press) 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 medications to customers with a doctor’s prescription
was eliminated from consideration and replaced by the next linked
website until a total of fifty NPWs was reached. Nearly all (92
percent) of the NPWs contained an implied legitimacy or credibility
claim of some kind. Over 80 percent of NPWs contained a medical
legitimacy claim. Fewer NPWs displayed a retailer legitimacy claim
(24 percent). 88 percent of NPWs accept payment via one of the major
credit cards and over half (52 percent) mention delivery through
a reputable carrier like FedEx or DHL. These findings suggest that
working with credit card and shipping companies may be a viable
mechanism for identifying ownership of NPWs and potentially suspending
their credit card contracts. Approximately half (52 percent) of
NPWs require some kind of online questionnaire to be filled out
by the patient; a much smaller percentage offer to conduct a telephone
consultation, either for free (8 percent) or a fee (20 percent).
Research conducted since 2002 by Dr. Robert Forman and his colleagues
at the Treatment Research Institute (TRI) (Forman, 2003; Forman
et al 2006) has identified more than 300 unique websites offering
to sell non-prescription opioid drugs. In over 50 Internet monitoring
replications in which search terms such as codeine, or Vicodin were
used, more than 50 percent of the links returned for these terms
led to websites offering to sell opioid medications without a prescription
(Forman et al 2006). When the search prefix “no prescription” was
added to the drug term (e.g. no prescription Vicodin), the proportion
of NPWs obtained increased to 60-80 percent. During
a one week investigation in 2004, the National Center on Addiction
and Substance Abuse (CASA 2004) identified 147 anchor web sites
that actually offered sales of Schedules II – IV controlled prescription
drugs without a prescription, while only 10 websites requiring prescription
verification were found. In a 2006 update of this study, CASA 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 20 (CASA 2006).
6.
Difficulty in Reducing On-line Access.
Legitimate
online pharmacies (e.g., drugstore.com,
caremark.com)
provide convenience and efficiency to consumers while complying
with state and federal regulations that require a valid prescription
from the consumer’s physician. The American Medical Association
(AMA) and the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (NABP)
have issued policy statements that support the Internet as a medium
for processing legitimate prescriptions. However, hundreds of websites
now sell prescription medications based solely on an online questionnaire,
a telephone interview, or a simple online order without any interaction
with a licensed healthcare professional (See Forman et al 2006).
This has been recognized as a threat to public health (American
Medical Association Policy H-120.956 – 3, American Medical Association
Policy H-120.949, National Association Boards of Pharmacy 2003).
The
benefits of the Internet are available 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 (U.S. Department of Justice 1970)
prohibits the sale of Schedule I drugs such as marijuana, heroin,
crack cocaine, and ecstasy and regulates access to Schedule II-V
drugs, including opioid analgesics, sedatives, tranquilizers, stimulants
and steroids by requiring a valid prescription from an appropriately
licensed healthcare professional (U.S. Department of Justice 1970).
However, many countries have drug policies that differ from those
of the United States, or have similar laws but less enforcement.
The fluidity and virtual reality of cyberspace are ideally suited
to illicit drug transactions, creating a complex challenge for law
enforcement, policy makers and the general public (White House Executive
Order 1999, U.S. General Accounting Office 2004). Businesses
wishing to circumvent the U.S. Controlled Substances Act may do
so by establishing multiple websites, in multiple countries, under
multiple online identities (Forman and Block 2006). Many
of the websites selling drugs are hosted outside the United States,
and drug suppliers guarantee to (and actually do) replace any drugs
intercepted by U.S. Customs or other law enforcement agencies.
Recent studies indicate that Russia, Ukraine, and some South Asian
countries are emerging as key locations for drug sales websites.
For example, a “no prescription website” 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 effect of this was
seen following the April 2005 report of the DEA’s Operation “CyberChase”
which resulted in the arrest of 20 individuals in eight U.S. cities
and four foreign countries, operating over 100 websites (U.S. Department
of Justice 2005a, 2005b). However, this widely publicized DEA operation
did not appear to have any measurable impact on the availability
of non-prescription controlled substances over the Internet (Forman
et al. personal communication based on May through October 2005
searches of NPW sites). It is likely that in response to these
domestic arrests, operators of NPWs will continue to move pieces
of their operations off-shore, making prosecution efforts even more
difficult. (Forman, Marlowe, and McLellan 2006).
7.
Intercepting NPW Deliveries.
Since
it is illegal to purchase prescription opioids and other controlled
substances without prescription, there are limited data on the actual
delivery rate of NPWs. It
is easy to think that, like so many other Internet “scams,” there
is no reality to the offers of sale from these websites. However,
the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO) recently conducted an investigation
in which they attempted 11 purchases of opioids without prescription
(including hydrocodone and oxycodone). Of those 11 attempted purchases,
10 were delivered. The GAO also found that many Internet suppliers
promise to replace any drugs intercepted by U.S. law enforcement
agencies and they actually do so. (GAO 2004). In June 2005, the
Miami DEA announced the arrest of eight operators of illegal drug
sales websites. Seized records showed these websites delivered over
28,000 orders for controlled substances without prescription per
week, particularly hydrocodone (Vicodin).
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” (Fong 1999). A week
later the White House issued Executive Order 13133 creating the
“Working Group on Unlawful Conduct on the Internet” leading to the
publication of “The Electronic Frontier” (Attorney General’s Office
2000). The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) subsequently published
guidance (Department of Justice 2001) 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 (American
Medical Association Policy (Policy H-120.949).
8.
Enforcement.
Since
2001, the sale of controlled substances over the Internet has been
cited in U.S. Justice Department reports (National
Drug Intelligence Center 2001, 2002; DEA 2002)
and has led to criminal investigations for Internet sales of non-prescription
drugs such as ecstasy, gamma hydroxyl butyrate (GHB) and methamphetamines,
(Drug Enforcement Administration News Release 2002, 2003;
National Drug Intelligence Center 2003) and
the illicit sale of prescription drugs online (NDAS 2001, National
Drug Intelligence Center 2003, U.S. Department of Justice 2002,
Hutchinson 2002). Similarly, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) has provided testimony (Hubbard 2003), and reports (Henney
2000, FDA 2003, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research 2003)
on the risks of online prescription practices. In conjunction with
U.S. Customs, the FDA participated in an investigation of illicit
prescription drug sales originating overseas (FDA 2003). On March
1, 2004, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy
(ONDCP) issued the 2004 National Drug Control Strategy Update (White
House 2004) which for the first time described plans to monitor
illicit Internet drug offers (p. 28). Concurrent with the issuance
of this strategy update, ONDCP issued a press release (ONDCP 2004)
entitled “U.S. Drug Prevention, Treatment, Enforcement Agencies
Take on ‘Doctor Shoppers,’ ‘Pill Mills’” and a fact sheet entitled
“Reducing Prescription Drug Abuse” (ONDCP 2004) which announce initiatives
to stop illicit online prescription drug sales. There are 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 (ISPs) where NPWs files
are hosted (Forman and Block In press).
The
existing regulation of Internet prescription drug sales is very
clear on paper, but quite murky in practice. At its most basic,
the purchase of any prescription drug must be done through a properly
accredited Internet site, which requires a valid prescription.
To oversee this regime, the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy
(NABP) has established a certification program to enable the approved
sales of prescription medications over the Internet. The program,
known as Verified Internet Pharmacy Practice Sites (VIPPS) certification,
allows merchants in the United States to sell prescription medications
over the Internet. To achieve VIPPS accreditation, a pharmacy site
must comply with the licensing and inspection requirements of the
state in which it does business, and must demonstrate to the NABP
compliance with certain specified criteria, including patient rights
to privacy, authentication and security of prescription orders,
maintenance of quality assurance and improvement program, and provision
of meaningful consultation between patients and pharmacists.
Even
with certification, there are limits on what a pharmacy can sell
based on Federal regulation. These rules apply equally to physical
and virtual pharmacies. Physicians can prescribe and pharmacies
can dispense drugs listed in the Controlled Substances Act Schedules
II through V, which are defined as drugs with a legitimate medical
purpose, but dangerous if not properly controlled. Drugs listed
in Schedule I are considered to have no legitimate medical purpose
and are illegal to sell under any circumstance, such as heroin.
The powerful drugs currently most prone to abuse are Oxycontin (Schedule
II) and Vicodin (Schedule III). Schedule II drugs cannot be provided
legally over the Internet, while Schedule III drugs can prescribed
through a VIPPS Internet pharmacy.
Despite
this regulatory regime and the fact that purchasing controlled substances
overseas is illegal, traditional enforcement efforts towards illicit
purchases have generally been lax. This is because of the overwhelming
volume of pharmaceuticals entering the United States and the political
controversy around individuals attempting to purchase cheaper prescription
drugs for legitimate medical problems overseas. As a result, despite
a clear regulatory regime, the actual flow of prescription drugs
(legal and illegal) into the United States continues to accelerate.
9.
Increasing Awareness of Drug Availability Online.
Beginning
in the fall of 2003, the popular press began reporting on the availability
of prescription opioids over the Internet without prescription (Forman
et al 2006). The earliest newspaper report on NPWs was published
on October 18, 2003, in the New York Times (Harris 2003) 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 released a five-part series detailing the results
of a one-year investigation into the availability of prescription
drugs without a prescription (Gaul and Flaherty 2003a, b, c, d,
e, f). A month after the Washington Post series, USA Today (Rubin
2003) 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, Philadelphia
Daily News, Boston Herald, Miami Herald, Denver Post, San Jose Mercury
News, and the Chicago Tribune publishing stories about the online
availability of controlled substances without a prescription (Anderson
2003, Caywood 2003, DeWolf 2003, Frates 2003, Gaul 2003, Healy 2003,
Higgins 2003). Since then, press and broadcast coverage of this
phenomenon has accelerated. A recent example is the front-page story
in USA TODAY on June 13, 2006, “Prescription Drugs Find Place in
Teen Culture.” The press reports that the term “pharm party” where
youth swallow fistfuls of prescription drugs is now widespread.
Building
A Comprehensive Strategy
I. Conduct Research Designed to Obtain.
A. Accurate Information regarding the Extent of Controlled Substances
Availability without Prescription over the Internet.
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 without prescription over the Internet. In a recent Medline
search 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 preliminary research report (Forman
2003). This, and other searches conducted using Medline and PsychINFO,
identified general articles about topics such as online pharmacy
prescribing practices, the Internet as a source of drug information,
and the online sale of sexual performance enhancement drugs, but
no articles were found about websites selling prescription opioids
without a prescription.
The
European Union has funded 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 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 articles about the availability of
controlled substances on the Internet (Schifano et al 2003).
B.
Data on Internet Role in Supplying Prescription Drug Abusers.
There
is an overall lack of information about who is using the Internet
to obtain psychoactive prescription drugs without a prescription.
The original impetus for TRI’s research on NPW websites came from
reports in AA meetings and to clinicians that advertisements for
drugs on the Internet were becoming an important contributor to
relapse. To explore this carefully, a study was undertaken in 2004
in a collaborating private adult residential treatment program outside
Philadelphia (Gordon, Forman and Siatkowski 2006). One hundred consecutive
adult patients were interviewed concerning how they had obtained
the drugs they had used 30 days prior to entering treatment. Nine
percent reported having purchased their drugs online and an additional
2 percent stated they had found their dealer online. In addition,
29 percent indicated that they knew they could purchase drugs over
the Internet without prescription and 11percent 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
has become a source of controlled substances for some addicted individuals
(Gordon et al 2006).
Although
we have extensive anecdotal evidence of the Internet’s role in illicit
drug distribution, we still do not have solid information about
the amounts of controlled substances that are being purchased without
a prescription over the Internet, both by adults and adolescents.
Neither of the two annual national drug use surveys, MTF and NSDUH,
contain questions asking non-prescription drug users where they
obtain their drugs (e.g., friends, internet, doctors, dealers, family
medicine cabinets), although they could do so in the future.
Relatively little is known about how socioeconomic factors and demographics,
such as race, gender and ethnicity, relate to adolescent non-medical
prescription drug use.. In terms of location, it has been observed
that drug use patterns among adolescents from rural areas may be
different from those of non-rural youth (Gordon and Caltabiano 1996,
Warner and Leukefeld 2001) However, some publications show rural
youth exceed urban youth in their drug use and some find the contrary
(Ruiz et al 2005). The role of the Internet as a source of drugs
for these groups has not been explored. For example, could the Internet
be a more important source for rural youth than for urban youth
who have more immediate access to dealers? Would female adolescents
(who already show greater non-medical use of prescription drugs)
be more likely than males to use the Internet to purchase these
drugs, since the Internet does not involve direct contact with dealers
and purchases can be made in privacy rather than on the street?
II.
Develop New Treatment and Prevention Strategies to Respond to Emerging
Role of Internet as Drug Supplier.
Most
adults do not realize that many adolescents and even younger children
may find it easier to buy drugs online than on street corners.
Even at very young ages, they can navigate easily among websites,
which offer information, entertainment, and consumer goods. Websites
aggressively advertise controlled substances, so that a seventh-grader
researching a paper for health class might enter the term “Vicodin”
in any major search engine and see sites that sell these narcotics,
without a prescription, on a majority of the listings provided.
Even websites that claim they require prescriptions often allow
users to generate a “prescription” by simply checking off a series
of quick questions; no direct interaction with a physician is required.
Although
media coverage of the misuse of pharmaceutical drugs by adolescents
is increasing, many parents and youth do not believe that these
drugs are a threat. A recent national survey by the Partnership
for a Drug Free America (2005) reported that almost half of teens
said they believe that prescription drugs, even if not prescribed
by a doctor, are much safer than street drugs and almost a third
said that prescription pain killers, even if not prescribed, are
not addictive. The survey also reported that adults and youth do
not view controlled substances such as Vicodin as equally “dangerous”
as narcotics that can be bought from street dealers or classmates,
especially since these drugs are widely prescribed by doctors for
legitimate medical purposes. The ease with which these drugs are
obtained over the Internet, their packaging, and their appearance
of legitimacy can contribute to the belief that such drugs are relatively
safe when in fact these drugs can be lethal when taken in high doses
or in combination with alcohol. The Partnership for a Drug Free
America has recently undertaken a major national campaign to educate
parents and adolescents about the dangers of non-medical use of
controlled substances, specifically Vicodin and other narcotic analgesics.
There
are some indications from treatment centers that Internet drug availability
may play a role both in developing drug dependence and in relapse.
For both adolescents and adults who purchase drugs over the Internet,
the computer could become a relapse trigger, which may need to be
avoided until a stable recovery has been secured. More research
is needed regarding the effect that Internet access has on relapse,
both in terms of the client being confronted with unsolicited offers
for prescription drugs via email, and the role of NPW’s in facilitating
access that can lead to relapse.
The
powerful addictive properties of some of these drugs further complicate
treatment and prevention. Treatment for adolescents purchasing prescription
narcotics over the Internet may require unique interventions when
compared to traditional treatment approaches for abuse of illicit
street drugs. This is a pressing concern because of the substantial
risk for overdose and death resulting from the use of prescription
opioids and sedatives particularly in combination with alcohol.
Treatment,
intervention and prevention efforts face new challenges related
to the emergence of the Internet as a drug source. Current drug
education and prevention programs, designed largely for classroom
use, may not have the same impact on the emerging phenomenon of
Internet drug sales to youth, since evidence suggests that parents,
teachers, and the students themselves do not view drugs obtained
over the Internet as equally “dangerous” as those bought from street
pushers or even classmates. The skills taught in most school drug
education curricula may not prove relevant in the very context of
the Internet, where children can buy drugs without physical contact
with sellers or peers. Over the Internet, a 14-year old can access
a tremendous amount of information about dangerous drugs, including
how to purchase them without a prescription. New prevention strategies
may be required to deal with this new reality, including ways to
use Internet technology to teach prevention.
III.
Encourage Public and Private Collaboration to Curtail Internet Sales
of Controlled Substances without Prescription.
As
is the case with any drug epidemic, if we wait too long, the problem
will become far more difficult to control. Based on our extensive
research, particularly our contacts with treatment professionals
in the field, we are convinced that now is the time to develop a
comprehensive approach to combating the illicit sale and shipment
of these drugs to youth. The private sector has a powerful role
to play. We believe that all parties involved in Internet commerce,
from advertising, to ISPs, to the financial institutions that make
electronic payments possible, to the common carriers that ship merchandise,
need to embrace the problem of internet sales of controlled substances
without prescription as a top priority. Each sector has a different
interaction with the eco-system that drives this commerce. Each
sector will have different strategies to employ. Some of the strategies
discussed in the “Keep Internet Neighborhoods Safe” public-private
collaboration include:
A.
Work with Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to offer their customers
managed service that can be configured to block access to
websites offering to sell controlled substances without
prescription.
Parents
are deeply concerned about the safety of their children where they
live and go to school. Parents should be able to limit their children’s
access to drugs in the virtual neighborhood of the Internet, whether
the parents are technically savvy or not. ISPs can offer their
customers the opportunity to implement technology that will block
access to websites offering to sell controlled substances without
prescription. The technology should be easy for customers to install
and use and could be made available directly by the ISPs or through
third party providers. The largest of the ISPs already offer parental
controls which could be adapted to serve this valuable function.
Earlier efforts by federal and state governments to mandate filtering
systems in the area of pornography have failed because of spillovers
to legitimate areas. These approaches have most often faltered
by permitting or requiring ISPs to use Internet Protocol (“IP”)
based filtering. Where a filtering system is based on an ISP blocking
designated IP addresses, the filter can block numerous lawful sites
that share the same IP address.
We
propose empowering parents and other customers to decide whether
to implement filtering as part of their ISP service. It would give
the ISP the option of providing a software or hardware filtering
system implemented on the ISP end or on the customer’s computer.
Even when a filtering system is URL or content based, if the ISP
can effect the filtering only by applying it to all of its customers
and not just the ones requesting it, the spillover effect could
harm valued First Amendment interests of otherwise lawful Internet
users. If the ISP’s network configuration does not permit customer
specific, URL-based filtering, or if it is simply more economical
for the ISP, the ISP could provide the filtering system through
software on the customer’s computer, just as many ISPs presently
implement anti-virus and anti-spam filters. For example, Microsoft
has announced that it will implement parental controls that will
enable customers to request filtering of drug sites as part of the
forthcoming VISTA operating system.
ISPs
alternatively may want to make a simpler option available to their
customers. There is no reason why parents who do not want to be
able to purchase controlled substances over the Internet need to
have access to websites selling them in their home. An ISP could,
directly or through a third party provider such as Look Smart’s
Net Nanny, offer its customers a system that blocks access to all
websites selling prescription drugs over the Internet, whether lawfully
or unlawfully.
B.
Prevent Misuse of Financial Institutions to Facilitate Illegal
Sales of Controlled Substances over the Internet.
The financial sector can play a pivotal role in combating the trafficking
of illicit drugs on the Internet, since most of the purchases of
controlled substances without prescription rely on payment by credit
cards or PayPal. All financial institutions already have extensive
legal obligations to ensure the integrity of the financial system.
Responsibilities for monitoring the international financial system
for abuse and preventing such abuse should include explicit requirements
to monitor illicit drug sales. The obligations to “know your customer”
and conduct due diligence have been reinforced by both anti-money
laundering legislation and the USA Patriot Act. The combination
provides a powerful framework that is fully applicable to sales
of controlled substances without prescription over the Internet.
Most major financial institutions already include prohibitions on
the use of their financial networks for any illicit purchase or
sale of drugs. This practice should be adopted throughout the industry.
Financial institutions could also include a contractual due diligence
requirement for any organization, including merchant banks, third
party acquirers and other payment processors, including credit card
companies, to monitor their networks for any use of the financial
network for illicit drug sales. This information about offending
accounts could then be shared with other financial institutions
as well as law enforcement agencies for appropriate action to protect
the credit network from illegal sales of substances.
C.
Develop national education campaigns about the dangers of non-
medical use of controlled substances which are increasingly
available over the Internet as well as technological means of
protecting home computers from these websites.
The Partnership for a Drug Free America has undertaken in the past
year a major educational campaign targeted at parents and adolescents
to inform them of the dangers of non-medical use of controlled substances
obtained over the Internet as well as the dangers posed by excessive
use of over the counter medications, such as cold remedies. This
effort will be critically important in shaping public understanding
and attitudes about these problems. In addition, government agencies,
such as NIDA and SAMHSA, have launched national educational initiatives
about non-prescription drug use by adolescents.
Internet Service Providers (ISPs) can also play a critical role
in educating their customers about the dangers presented by illicit
internet drug sales in the information they regularly provide to
their subscribers. They can also educate their customers about new
technological safeguards such as firewalls and parental control
software that can prevent the use of computers for the illegal purchase
of addictive controlled substances. Moreover, ISPs can make these
technological safeguards widely available to their customers and
update the technology as needed.
D.
Whenever Internet users request a search for any controlled
substance, encourage all major Internet search engines
to display prominent warnings that it is illegal to purchase
controlled substances without a valid prescription in the
United States.
To buy controlled substances without prescription over the Internet,
adolescents must first find websites that are offering to sell these
drugs. Many young people use the Internet to find everything from
music downloads to movie tickets. Through search engines such as
Google and Yahoo!, easily constructed searches readily lead to hundreds
of websites offering to sell controlled substances without prescription.
Internet search engines can play a deterrent role by placing forceful
warnings at the top of search results for controlled substances
without prescription. They can also help educate Internet users
about the dangers of non-prescription use of controlled substances
by providing automatic links to drug education websites whenever
these search requests are made. These links would take users to
easily accessible websites, including those sponsored by Federal
government agencies as well as those operated by private organizations,
such as the Partnership for a Drug Free America which provide information
about the dangers of non-medical use of powerful prescription drugs,
such as Vicodin or Oxycontin. A list of some of these online educational
resources is attached as Appendix B.
“Keep Internet Neighborhoods Safe” is a collaborative effort of
Drug Strategies, the Center for International Criminal Justice and
the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School,
the Weill Medical Center of Cornell University and the Treatment
Research Institute at the University of Pennsylvania. For additional
information, please contact Mathea Falco, President, Drug Strategies
at 202-939-0664 or dspolicy@aol.com.
This
project is made possible by support from the Miriam and Peter Haas
Fund, Dr. Laurie Michaels, the Center for International Criminal
Justice at Harvard Law School and Carolyn S. Brody. The background
research was supported in part by the National Institute on Drug
Abuse and the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment.
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