BALTIMORE, MD (May 10, 2011) โ€“ Governor Martin Oโ€™Malley today convened a roundtable discussion on Marylandโ€™s new Prescription Drug Monitoring Program, signed into law by the Governor this morning. He was joined at the event by Gil Kerlikowske, Director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy and Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, Secretary of the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Dozens of representatives of the medical, pharmaceutical and law enforcement communities also took part.
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The Governor convened the discussion at the laboratory of the National Institute on Drug Abuse on the Johns Hopkins Bayview Campus. The laboratory, known as the Intramural Research Laboratory, is a major federal center for research on the causes and prevention of drug abuse.
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โ€œPublic safety is among our most solemn obligations as public servants, and preventing the abuse of prescription drugs โ€“ the fastest growing drug problem in Maryland โ€“ is a big part of our strategy to protect Maryland families,โ€ said Governor Oโ€™Malley. โ€œThousands of Marylanders every year are suffering from the scourge of addiction.ย  Our new program will link public health and public safety systems to knock down the silos that currently block information-sharing and provide the knowledge that is essential to the health and well-being of the people of our state.โ€
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The new system will focus on potentially addictive prescription drugs, and electronically link the medical and pharmaceutical communities. It will enable professionals to track use of prescription drugs and recognize trends indicating abuse. This will make it clear if a patient is engaging in โ€œdoctor shoppingโ€ and shed light on โ€œpill mills,โ€ through which drugs are accumulated and sold illegally.ย  When probable cause arises pointing to illegal use of certain prescription drugs, law enforcement will be able, with a subpoena, to draw on information from the system and follow up with appropriate criminal investigations.
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โ€œI congratulate Governor Oโ€™Malley and the State of Maryland for becoming the 47th state to sign a prescription drug monitoring program into law,โ€ said Gil Kerlikowske, Director of National Drug Control Policy.ย  โ€œAs public health officials in Maryland know all too well, the abuse of prescription drugs impose a tremendous burden on the residents of Maryland. This vital piece of legislation is a tremendous step forward in combating our national prescription drug abuse epidemic and will save lives by identifying, deterring, and preventing drug abuse and diversion, while at the same time allowing access to legitimate use of prescription drugs.โ€
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The Maryland program will be administered by the Stateโ€™s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, DHMH Secretary joined the Governor and Mr. Kerlikowske at the discussion.ย 
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“Together we will reverse the rise of prescription drug abuse in Maryland,โ€ said Joshua M. Sharfstein M.D., Marylandโ€™s Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene.ย  โ€œHealth care providers can use this tool to spot patients in trouble and begin the treatment process.โ€
Prescription drug abuse is the fastest growing drug problem in Maryland. Illegal diversion of prescription drugs takes a heavy toll on the public health and safety in the state.
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ยทย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Between 2007 and 2010, treatment admissions related to abuse of prescription opiates in Maryland increased 106 percent.
ยทย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  Between 2007 and 2010, poison control calls related to oxycodone increased 250 percent.
ยทย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  In 2010,