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Board of Hearing Aid Specialists Public Meeting
July 26, 9 a.m., Miami
Miami Beach Resort and Spa
For details, call (305) 532-3600
Low Income Pool Council Public Meeting
July 28,10 a.m. – 3 p.m., Hollywood
Memorial Regional Hospital, Main Auditorium, 3501
For details, contact Edwin Stephens at (850)413-8067 or Suncom 294-8067, stephene@
ahca.myflorida.com
Department of Children and Family Service Public Hearing
July 28, 1:30 p.m., Tallahassee
1317 Winewood Blvd., Bldg. 3, Rm. 455
For details, contact Pat Whitford at (850)410-3479
FL Assn of Community Health Centers & AHEC Meeting
July 28-30, Bonita Springs, FL
Hyatt CocoPoint
For details, contact Heidi Updike Butler at heidi@fachc.org or visit www.fachc.org
Cover Florida: The Unregulated Health Insurance Market
July 30, 9 a.m. - 12 Noon, Miami
RSVP/Details: Roxannep@hscdade.org or 305-576-5001 x12
Board of Orthotists and Prosthetists Public Meeting
July 31, 2 p.m.; Aug.1, 9 a.m., Orlando
Crowne Plaza Orlando Universal
For details contact Joe Baker, Jr. by accessing www.doh.state.fl.us/mqa/orth Pros/index.html.
Brain and Spinal Cord Injury Public Meeting
Aug. 8, 8:30 a.m. – 4 p.m, Orlando
The Grand Bohemian Hotel
For details, contact Suzanna Kelly at (850)245-4045,
or Suzanne_Kelly@doh.state.fl.us
Board of Pharmacy Professional Practice Committee Meeting
August 12, 9 a.m., Orlando
Orlando Airport Marriot
Also available on Conference Call: (888)808-6959; code: 5642037
For information, contact the Board of Pharmacy at (850)245-4292. The agenda will be available at www.doh.state.fl.us/mqa/pharmacy, two weeks prior to the meeting.
Board of Pharmacy Rules Committee Meeting
August 12, 2 p.m. Orlando
Orlando Airport Marriot
Also available via conference call: (888) 808-6959; code: 5642037
For details, contact the Board of Pharmacy at (850)245-4292. The agenda will be available at www.doh.state.fl.us/mqa/pharmacy, two weeks prior to the meeting.
Empowering Healthcare: A Look at Key Components
August 13, Ft. Lauderdale
Signature Grand
Contact Scott Langdon, 407-425-9500, scott@flhcc.com or visit www.flhcc.com for details
Board of Pharmacy Public Meeting
August 13, 8 a.m., Orlando
Orlando Airport Marriot
For details, contact the Board of Pharmacy at (850)245-4292.The agenda will also be available one week prior to the meeting date at www.doh.state.fl.us/mqa/pharmacy.
2008 Florida Minority Health Disparities Summitt
August 13-15, Tampa
Grand Hyatt Tampa Bay
For details, contact Susan Smith at (850) 245-4111 or visit www.doh.state.fl.us/Minority/
index.htm
Board of Medicine Credentials Committee Public Meeting
August 14, 9:00 a.m., Orlando
Renaissance Hotel
For details, visit www.flhealthsource.com or call (850)245-4131. For an agenda, contact Shamyah Gibson at shamyah_gibson@doh.state.fl.us or call (850)245-4131, ext. 3518.
Board of Medicine Anesthesiologist Assistants Committee Public Meeting
August 14, 9:15 a.m., Orlando
Renaissance Hotel Orlando
For details, visit www.flhealthsource.com or call (850)245-4131. For an agenda, contact Chandra Prine at chandra_prine@doh.state.fl.us or call (850)245-4135.
Board of Medicine Physician Assistant Council Meeting
August 14, 9:30 a.m., Orlando
Renaissance Orlando Hotel
For information, call (850)245-4131or visit www.flhealthsource.com. For an agenda, contact Vera Johnson at Vera_Johnson@doh.state.fl.us or call (850)245-4131, ext. 3528.
Board of Medicine Rules and Legislative Committee Meeting
August 14, 9:45 a.m., Orlando
Renaissance Orlando Hotel
For information, visit www.flealthsource.com or call (850)245-4131. For an agenda, contact Whitney Bowen at whitney_bowen@doh.state.fl.us or (850)245-4131, ext. 3517.
Board of Medicine Surgical Care/Quality Assurance Committee Public Meeting
August 14,10 a.m., Orlando
Renaissance Orlando Hotel
For details, visit www.flhealthsource.com or call (850)245-4131. For an agenda, contact Gwyn Willis at Gwyn_Willis@doh.state.fl.us or (850)245-4131, ext. 3532.
Board of Medicine Public Meeting
August 15-16, 8 a.m., Orlando
Renaissance Orlando Hotel
For details, visit www.flhealthsource.com or call (850)245-4131. For an agenda, contact Whitney Bowen at whitney_bowen@doh.state.fl.us or call (850)245-4131, ext. 3517.
Board of Medicine Probable Cause Panel- South
September 12, 2 p.m.
Conference Call: (888) 808-6959
Code: 2454131
For details, contact Trisha L. Grubbs at (850)245-4640, ext. 8145 or email her at Trisha_Grubbs@doh.state.fl.us
Division of Medical Quality Assurance Public Meeting
Sept. 17, 8:30 a.m. – 12 Noon, Tallahassee
Betty Easley Conf. Center, Rm. 152
For details, contact Cassandra Pasley, (850)245-4224
Board of Medicine Probable Cause Panel- North
September 26, 2 p.m.
Conference Call: (888) 808-6959,
Code: 2454131
For details, contact Joyce Blackwell at (850)245-4640, ext. 8142 or email her at Joyce_Blackwell@doh.state.fl.us |
Often-abused drug is hottest seller in state’s discount card program
1/24/2008 © Florida Health News
By Carol Gentry and Christine Jordan Sexton
TALLAHASSEE – More than 20,000 uninsured and elderly Floridians have signed up for prescription-drug discount cards since the state-sponsored program began a month ago, Gov. Charlie Crist proudly told reporters Wednesday.
The cards have saved users nearly $58,000 so far, a result he called “impressive.”
There’s just one little problem: The drug listed on the governor’s press release as the one most often purchased through the state-sponsored program also appears on the Drug Enforcement Administration’s list of “drugs and chemicals of concern.”
Carisoprodol, better known by its brand name Soma, is “one of the most commonly diverted drugs” from legitimate use to street sales, according to the DEA’s Office of Diversion Control. Abuse of the drug, the DEA Web site says, “has escalated in the last decade.”
By buying the drug through Florida’s state-sponsored program, card holders saved 53 percent on the price of carisoprodol, the governor’s press release said. The state’s web site for prescription drug prices, www.myFloridaRx.com, shows that a month’s supply of 350 mg. tablets, 90 pills, averages $40 to $50 in urban and suburban pharmacies. Thus, card-holders could get 90 Soma pills for a little over $20.
According to the DEA, Soma sells on the street for $1 to $5 a pill. So a one-month supply of 90 pills that costs Florida card-holders a little over $20 could bring anywhere from $90 to $450 if they divert it to the black market.
The legitimate use of Soma is for short-term relief of muscle pain and spasms, according to medical sites. The drug is supposed to be used for only a week or two in combination with rest and physical therapy – a temporary solution to a sore back or neck. Prolonged abuse, according to the DEA, can lead to dependence and withdrawal symptoms when the drug is stopped.
The reason for its popularity on the street, according to the DEA, is that when combined with other drugs, particularly narcotics, Soma can produce euphoria. Addicts are said to like Soma because it adds to the punch of more expensive street drugs, making it possible to get high for less money. That has produced a thriving black market, the DEA says, fueled by “doctor-shopping.” Often it’s hard for doctors to tell the difference between a legitimate patient who has pulled a muscle and a sophisticated doctor-shopper, DEA says.
While the federal government doesn’t classify carisoprodol as a controlled drug, Florida does. State law lists it as a Schedule IV, with a lower potential for abuse than anabolic steroids or codeine, but still requiring strict precautions in prescribing.
Florida Medical Examiners reported that Soma was implicated in more than 300 fatal overdoses in the state in 2005, surpassing deaths from heroin, Dilaudid and other strong addictive painkillers. The number of deaths from carisoprodol jumped 51 percent in two years, they said.
Crist’s spokesman Thomas Philpot, contacted Wednesday afternoon, said he knew nothing about the drug and couldn’t comment. Bill Janes, who directs the governor’s Office of Drug Control, could not be reached.
The drug-discount cards are available to any Floridian age 60 and older. Those who are younger must meet income limits – about $30,600 for one person, $62,000 for a family of four.
Of those enrolled in the program, only about 1,700 people have used it so far, the governor’s office said. Philpot said officials expect use of the cards to surge as participants use up their supplies of drugs and go to the pharmacy for refills. Almost 3,800 retail pharmacies are participating.
The program is being administered by Envision Pharmaceutical Services, a pharmacy benefits manager based in Ohio. Envision receives discounts from drug companies for buying in bulk, then passes the discounts on to card holders.
It costs $1.50 to activate the card and $1.50 dispensing fee per prescription, added to the discount price. The price and percentage discount vary depending on the drug. Applications are available at www.FloridaDiscountDrugCard.com or 1-866-341-8894.
Crist’s office reported that just over 6,800 of the discount card holders are 65 or older and 540 of them have used the cards, filling 1,039 prescriptions. Without the cards, the $52,000 they spent would have been one-third more, nearly $69,500.
More than half of the 20,459 Floridians enrolled in the program are younger than 60, the governor’s report said. Ages 45 to 59 use the program the most, it said, and people in that age group filled about 1,200 prescriptions, ¾ of them generics.
The governor said that means the cards are meeting a need among working families who lack health insurance entirely or have no coverage for prescriptions. Florida has one of the highest rates of uninsured, estimated in recent reports at almost one in four persons under age 65.
Crist said he will propose other measures to help the uninsured before the Legislative session gets under way in March.
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