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The Prescription Monitoring Program Information Exchange would swap information through a central hub at Ohio's Board of Pharmacy. State databases were checked more than two million times in 2008, the Justice Department said. The databases flagged prescription activity on nearly 500,000 more potential abusers.
A proposed interstate compact will be unveiled in time for legislatures to consider it when they assemble next year, said John Mountjoy, policy and research director of the Council of State Governments, a national nonprofit based in Lexington, Ky.
The contract would preserve state-by-state differences that include control of the databases by law enforcement agencies in Texas and California, health departments in North Carolina and Alabama, and pharmacy boards in more than a dozen states.
Doctors are encouraged to check the databases, but in 19 states the law says they aren't required to do so, according to the National Alliance for Model State Drug Laws.
There are also differing limits on law officers' access. Some states require investigators to get a warrant or court order, while others just require an active investigation on a suspect. Vermont doesn't allow law officers to access the database.
Some privacy groups are worried about hackers and identity theft after millions of electronic records were stolen from Virginia's database last year.
North Carolina radio talk shows and bloggers erupted in September when sheriffs proposed changing state law to give them easier access to the database. A common complaint was that investigators could invade their privacy, though most didn't know sheriff's deputies have been able to query the database since 2007.
"The problem is the public doesn't know about this database," said Daren Bakst, legal and regulatory studies director of the conservative John Locke Foundation in Raleigh. "You have access to a database of so many innocent individuals in order to find a tiny percentage who may be abusing."
[Associated
Press;
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