Ads target Missouri bill on cold medicine prescriptions
Friday, March 25, 2011
JEFFERSON CITY — An industry group representing manufacturers of over-the-counter drugs has begun running radio ads against a Missouri proposal requiring a doctor’s prescription to buy certain cold medicines that can be used to make the illegal drug methamphetamine.
The ads by the Consumer Healthcare Products Association target legislation pertaining to medications containing pseudoephedrine, a key ingredient in methamphetamine. Supporters of the legislation hope to cut down on Missouri’s meth production by making it harder for people to get ahold of pseudoephedrine.
The ads urge people to call lawmakers and tell them to “keep government out of your medicine cabinet.”
At issue are cold and allergy medicines such as Sudafed, Claritin-D, Advil Cold & Sinus and Mucinex-D.
“The large majority of consumers oppose a prescription requirement to access cold and allergy medicines containing pseudoephedrine,” Elizabeth Funderburk, a spokeswoman for the healthcare products group, said Friday. She added: “We know how things can quickly move in any state capital and want to make sure that — in advance of that — consumers are aware of the issue and their voices are heard.”
The organization also ran ads earlier this year against pseudoephedrine prescription proposals in Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia, she said.
Tennessee and Missouri ranked at the top nationally in meth lab incidents last year. Over the past decade, Missouri has passed a series of increasingly stringent laws to try to control the sale of pseudoephedrine medicines. The state already has mandated the medicines be moved behind the pharmacy counter, limited the quantities people can buy and required photo identification to purchase them.
In recent months, Missouri also implemented an industry-funded electronic database to provide real-time tracking of pseudoephedrine purchases with the hope of blocking sales to people stockpiling the drugs.
The pharmaceutical industry has urged lawmakers to wait to see if the database helps reduce meth incidents before trying something new.
But Gov. Jay Nixon and Attorney General Chris Koster both are backing efforts for Missouri to join Oregon and Mississippi in requiring a prescription for pseudoephedrine. They, and other supporters of the legislation, note that meth lab incidents have declined in those two other states.
A House committee heard testimony on the legislation earlier this month but has not voted on it.
House Speaker Steven Tilley, R-Perryville, said he has opposed such legislation in the past but now is “conflicted” about whether to require a prescription to buy pseudoephedrine.
“I think what you do with that is force law-abiding citizens to have to go see a doctor to fix a problem they used to be able to go to Walgreens to fix,” Tilley told reporters last week.
But Tilley noted that several Missouri cities already have enacted their own ordinances requiring a prescription, which he said is building momentum for a statewide law.

Comments
MK 2 years, 2 months ago
This sucks. I really hate the idea of having to set up an appointment or go to an urgent care clinic, pay possibly 80 to 100 dollars in order to see a doctor just to get a prescription for the only thing that relieves my cold symptoms. I think I'll stock up on and start hoarding the medicine before this goes into effect. I am sure Jay Nixon won't have the same problem should he want to get relief for his cold symptoms. He'll just call someone up, tell them he needs a prescription and send an employee to pick it and the medicine up for him. No skin off his back.
jdb 2 years, 2 months ago
Stocking up on cold medicine may not be a good idea. As the laws read now, here is what you need to do when you buy cold medicine that contains pseudoephedrine. First of all, you have to ask the pharmacist for the medicine. You are limited to the amount you can purchase at one time. Then you show an ID and sign for it. Once the transaction takes place, your name and the amount of medicine you purchased is entered into a data base.
Now if you go to a few more stores and repeat this process, your name will be red flagged as purchasing too much pseudoephedrine in a certain time frame. Law enforcement officials will be notified of this and more than likely they will pay you a visit with a warrant to look for your meth lab.
Now if you do decide to stock up, here are a few other items you may not want to purchase, especially at Wal-Mart. Do not buy Sudafed when you purchase lithium batteries, kitchen matches, Coleman fuel or coffee filters. Don't even purchase those items with Sudafed as Wally will call the cops on you for purchasing items commonly used to run a meth lab.
Isn't this war on drugs great?
TraceyT 1 year, 2 months ago
You can't stock up either, even if you jump through the hoops and buy it legally. Possession of more than 24 grams of pseudoephedrine is automatic evidence of intent to manufacture and deliver meth. Mo. Rev. Stat §195.235, 246 (2001).
JCLifer 2 years, 2 months ago
Punishing the innocent while the meth cookers can still get all the ingredients they want makes no sense to me.
Focus law enforcement on the meth cookers, not on the innocent people with colds and allergies.
wcywing 2 years, 2 months ago
what did you say, if you don't like the law, leave? that being said, if this passes, it will be a horrible law. i think its easy to spot a meth house. the law will not stop people from making meth. arrest people and charge a huge fine, and maybe increase jail time. this law won't work.
JCsleeper 2 years, 2 months ago
Put the meth cookers away for good and leave the rest of us alone.
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