Bush urges new rules on online sales of addictive prescription drugs

erosion

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President Bush called on Congress today to pass legislation that would restrict online sales of powerfully addictive prescription drugs, citing a growing number of overdoses.

Bush referred to San Diego teenager Ryan Haight as he unveiled the 2008 national drug control strategy in his weekly radio address. Haight overdosed on painkillers he bought on the Internet, prompting Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) to introduce the bill that Bush championed today.

The president said his national drug policy had reduced youth drug consumption by 24% since 2001. That progress has been counterbalanced by the growing problem of prescription drug abuse.

"Unfortunately, many young Americans do not understand how dangerous abusing medication can be," Bush said. "In recent years, the number of Americans who have died from prescription drug overdoses has increased."

John Walters, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, said prescription drugs were the top choice for 12- and 13-year olds. He said some estimates had 2,500 young people starting to use such drugs every day.

Walters added that 70% of young people obtained the drugs for free from family or friends, usually out of a medicine cabinet. The administration will encourage parents to safeguard their drugs, particularly painkillers; discard any leftover pharmaceuticals; and talk to their teenagers.

Walters stressed that the administration effort was not directed at older Americans who order cheaper drugs online from Canada or other overseas suppliers. "What we're concerned about is the diversion, for the purposes of abuse, of controlled substances, principally painkillers," he said.

Current drug strategy incorporates education and prevention, including nonpunitive random drug tests at schools. It also includes treatment options for addicts and enforcement to disrupt supply.

Walters praised Mexico and Colombia for their help in targeting traffickers and said they had disrupted the cocaine and methamphetamines supply to the U.S.

But Walters singled out Venezuela for failing to cooperate on drug control efforts. "We stand ready to work" with Venezuela, Walters said. But he added that many Venezuelan drug flights appeared to leave from controlled airstrips "where authorities could take control, but that hasn't been done."

He noted that drug traffic appeared to be going increasingly to Africa, Europe and the Caribbean. "It's a huge danger and a growing danger to Venezuela, to Europe, the Caribbean and the U.S.," Walters said.

Bush estimated that 860,000 fewer young Americans were using drugs today than in 2002, when the administration launched its anti-drug efforts. He said marijuana use was down 25%, Ecstasy use dropped by more than 50% and methamphetamine consumption dipped 64%.

Haight, a high school honors student and athlete, was 18 when he died in 2001 of an overdose of the painkiller hydrocodone. He bought the drug online using a debit card his parents had given him to buy baseball cards.

At the pharmacy website he filled out a questionnaire identifying himself as a 25-year-old with chronic back pain. The prescribing doctor never met or examined Haight.

Feinstein's bill would require a doctor to conduct an in-person examination before a prescription could be considered valid. It has been endorsed by Major League Baseball as a way to crack down on the sale of steroids over the Internet.

The bill has passed the Senate Judiciary Committee and awaits consideration by the full Senate.

Bush urges new rules on online sales of addictive prescription drugs
March 1, 2007
LA Times

Link
 
And this will impact the foreign pharmacy's that sell us stuff without a script how exactly...?
 
Bush referred to San Diego teenager Ryan Haight as he unveiled the 2008 national drug control strategy in his weekly radio address. Haight overdosed on painkillers he bought on the Internet, prompting Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) to introduce the bill that Bush championed today.

that name sounds very familiar
 
Current drug strategy incorporates education and prevention, including nonpunitive random drug tests at schools. It also includes treatment options for addicts and enforcement to disrupt supply.

are you serious ^? the next generation of kids are screwed...
 
Prescription drugs killing people? Really?!


Who the fuck would have thought.
 
The end of an era. Those easy to get hydro's have MANY people addicted
 
All the US pharmacies closed after a similar bill was passed years ago, thats why people go overseas now. There's gotta be something in this bill that ain't in this article.
 
erosion said:
Bush estimated that 860,000 fewer young Americans were using drugs today than in 2002, when the administration launched its anti-drug efforts. He said marijuana use was down 25%, Ecstasy use dropped by more than 50% and methamphetamine consumption dipped 64%.
are these stats for real ??
 
At the risk of being flogged, I must make this statement. I don't exactly disagree with this legislation. Although considered by many a hardcore junky to be a weak opioid drug, Hydrocodone is a potent narcotic analgesic, capable of producing tolerance, and thus addiction. As someone who has used the services mentioned, I know the processes involved with these online places. Personally, I believe that medications of such a nature should ONLY be given after a face to face meeting with a physician, who then determines the need for narcotic pain management. Obviously, the easier something is to obtain, the more people will be using said substance, aversion is not a bad approach.
 
i smell bullshit.... "Bush estimated that 860,000 fewer young Americans were using drugs today than in 2002, when the administration launched its anti-drug efforts. He said marijuana use was down 25%, Ecstasy use dropped by more than 50% and methamphetamine consumption dipped 64%."....
maybe it's true because so many users get locked up... for using.... it's BS... and this new Bill... it's not gonna change jackshit... you would have thought after 30 years people would start realising that the "war on drugs" is bullshit, usseless, a waste of time, and money, and ruins many people and their families lives....
 
I can see the MDMA being down...sure, people are consuming just as many pills as they used to, but since the gov went and FUCKED UP THE INDUSTRY people are just munching more meth and BZP bullshit.

Pot down?! HA!
 
phatass said:
"Bush estimated"

^^i think that there is the problem. I don't wanna know what bush estimates, figured and ponders in his head. At this point in his presidency who cares what someone told him to estimate???

edit: i thought getting hydro or percs (or anything good besides benzos) online was something that disappeared a few years back? i'm not asking for sources i just wish i knew the sites 3 or 4 years ago when I could have made great use of them.
 
erosion said:
Bush referred to San Diego teenager Ryan Haight as he unveiled the 2008 national drug control strategy in his weekly radio address. Haight overdosed on painkillers he bought on the Internet, prompting Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) to introduce the bill that Bush championed today.

Holy fuck. Didn't notice this till Wood pointed it out.

For those who don't know, Ryan was a BLer back in the day. He went by the name of Quiksilver on here, and was a good friend of many of our members. (See the Shrine for more...).

:(

~Raving is the wave of the future~
 
brainiacthemaniac said:
At the risk of being flogged, I must make this statement. I don't exactly disagree with this legislation. Although considered by many a hardcore junky to be a weak opioid drug, Hydrocodone is a potent narcotic analgesic, capable of producing tolerance, and thus addiction. As someone who has used the services mentioned, I know the processes involved with these online places. Personally, I believe that medications of such a nature should ONLY be given after a face to face meeting with a physician, who then determines the need for narcotic pain management. Obviously, the easier something is to obtain, the more people will be using said substance, aversion is not a bad approach.
FLOGGED :X

lol, cigarettes and alcohol are "capable of producing tolerance, and thus addiction" as well, do you feel that when it comes to those, that "aversion is not a bad approach"?
 
erosion said:
. It has been endorsed by Major League Baseball as a way to crack down on the sale of steroids over the Internet.

The bill has passed the Senate Judiciary Committee and awaits consideration by the full Senate.

Bush urges new rules on online sales of addictive prescription drugs
March 1, 2007
LA Times

Link



lol its endorsed by the MLB. That will not make any diff, if someone really wants to use steroids bad enough im shur they can find another way to get it.
 
^i agree with bingalpaws.

How can you say an opiate like hydrocodone is dangerous, overlooking something like alcohol... hydrocodone is nothing compared to alcohol and cigs. And this seems to be the drug they are targetting and what are they gonna do? Start shutting down more overseas pharmacies? (as if thats new). Gonna start intercepting all our packages? Also, why the focus on hydro? What about carfentanil?

i found this article pretty funny actually.

...except for the part that if i run out of a medication I need (a benzo) and i need to order some, or anyone in any similar situation... the sites we may use are gonna be down... I really hope this is just bullshit. Cuz if bush's 3rd grade math is correct, we smeared the shit out of mdma, lsd was decades ago, methamphetamine use is down by 224% and you whats next? Gotta find something... overseas RX! Then the RC'S! Then shit like salvia (im talking about salvia being schedule 1, you will buy it from a street dealer).

Also, it seems like they're not just targeting overseas opioids, which is what the first half implied, no, it looks like they're going for the jugular. benzos, opiates, steroids, and even gbl, 2c-e, every class of drug (as long as its overseas).

You know what, why not just take down the pharmacies selling tramadol and soma in the US instead? I'd much rather those be gone. Those are "addictive drugs" sold the same exact way: through a survey. Both overseas sites and US sites have the same "this is an official examination by a real MD via this survey, and they will either approve or deny" rules.
 
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