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Addicts face fingerprint test to get methadone at chemist

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Published Date: 08 February 2008
RECOVERING drug addicts are having their photos and fingerprints taken at an Edinburgh pharmacy in the first move of its kind in the city to prevent methadone getting into the wrong hands.
Clark Pharmacy, on Lindsay Road, Leith, has installed a fingerprint reader to identify patients with controlled prescriptions.

It has been designed primarily for the heroin substitute methadone, but could be used to monitor other drugs such as mo
rphine and anti-depressants.

The voluntary system sees customers having their fingerprints and photographs stored electronically to allow their identity to be verified each time they visit to pick up the prescription.

NHS Lothian today said the move would improve the security of methadone prescribing.

The "MethaMeasure" machine was installed by East Kilbride-based pharmacy wholesalers The Munro Group. The firm's director, Stephen Dickson, said it was the first of its kind in Edinburgh.

He said: "Dispensing methadone is a dangerous activity. It is easy to make a mistake and be fooled by someone pretending to be someone else. The MethaMeasure system prevents this."

The information commissioner's office, which deals with issues surrounding data protection, has sought an assurance that privacy safeguards are put in place and that all staff receive training.

However, Mr Dickson insisted the sensor stored only a very small amount of data. He added: "Even if the police were to impound a system, it is impossible to generate fingerprints from the data stored.

"All data stored in pharmacy computer systems is covered by the Data Protection Act 1998 and as such cannot be released without extremely exceptional circumstances. The fingerprinting system is not compulsory and patients can still ask to bring in their ID with them instead."

Further concerns have been raised by the father of a 28-year-old methadone patient.

The father, who didn't want to be named, said: "When my son got there about 15 or 20 methadone users were waiting and they weren't happy. The chemist never even told them who was wanting that information – the police, NHS or the chemist themselves. It raises all kinds of privacy issues."

Pat Murray, NHS Lothian's director of pharmacy, said: "This development could contribute to increasing security around methadone dispensing."

No-one from Clark Pharmacy was willing to comment today.





Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 08 February 2008 11:50 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

alex paterson,

embra 08/02/2008 12:23:52
So its easy to make a mistake,does this mean machines are better than man,who no doubt programs them.
2

John Knox furr First Meenister,

High St, Embra 08/02/2008 14:00:01
#2 Dunno why you feel it necessary to try and have a poke at us PC sorts. What's your problem? Take your chips aff your shoulder and leave them outside.
As for the story, "RECOVERING drug addicts" it starts... recovering?? Really? You reckon? I hae ma doots. Stop the supply of substitutes and they'd have to recover quick time, I reckon.
3

Destroy the Planet,

08/02/2008 14:31:26
#2#3 The alternative is robbing yer hoose
4

The Judge,

08/02/2008 14:37:27
Bar code tattoo on the forehead would solve a lot of problems they could be scanned before they get their fix and it would have the added benefit that we'd know who is the drain on society.

The methadone programe doesn't work, it only changes the drug not the fundamental causes of drug abuse.
5

,

08/02/2008 15:43:34
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
6

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

Newington 08/02/2008 17:05:26
#4: perhaps, but in a civilised society, the alternative would be shooting them as they attempted to rob one's house.
7

KTCB41,

08/02/2008 17:32:25
The story is, NHS patients required to have their photos and fingerprints taken to collect their prescription.

Think about it like that and take the drug addict out of it and it becomes quite a new development in terms of the provision of NHS services.
8

piper,

08/02/2008 18:05:23
well said #7 shoot all the scum junkies
9

Cappo Del Monte,

08/02/2008 18:12:58
Am sure some island for them could be adopted to live on with no drugs or drink for a year or so.
Then maybe if they are clean, re-entered into mainstream life
10

Sunny Jim,

08/02/2008 18:40:20
I'm sure Gruinard would be a nice place for them.
11

Cappo Del Monte,

08/02/2008 18:42:10
#11
You shouldnt be so nice
12

LanneM,

Edinburgh 09/02/2008 10:49:32
Don't see what the problem is... these people line up everyday at local chemists for their fix.. Never seen one of them concerned about privacy just about getting their fix. Think when you hit that state it goes out the window. Obviously the chemist is attempting to correct a problem... drugs getting into the wrong hands....Kind of like closing the barn door after the cow is out..but none the less a valiant attempt. I suspect if they are trying to diddle the system having someone else get the drugs they will just find a way of having it transfered to another chemist that doesn't have a fingerprint procedure. There were couple of other posts that had some good suggestions but unfortunately the killing... even of something that appears totally useless is still classified as murder... like the island though!
13

plord,

edinburgh 09/02/2008 12:34:37
what if they have no fingers?
14

zenith,

USA 09/02/2008 15:05:45
So many do not understand how methadone treatment (MMT) works and as a result, see it as "trading one drug for another" or "addicts getting their fix", etc. Methadone does NOT cause a high or euphoria--it merely controls the symptoms of withdrawal. No one is standing in line thinking "Yay! I cannot wait for that fantastic legal high I will get off my methadone!" Going to a clinic or chemist is a grim, humiliating chore for most patients, not a blissful "fix". The facts are that many long term opiate addicts have sustained permanent damage to the brain chamistry--the production of natural endorphins, which are the body's natural opiates, is no longer occurring and will never resume. Methadone restores the natural chemical balance of the brain without causing a high, so the person can return to a normal life without severe depression and constant cravings that lead to inevitable relapse. MMT is not as successful in the UK as it is in the USA because doses in the UK are very suboptimal. The minimal effective dose for most patients is 80-120mg--many require even more--and in the UK the average dose is 30-40mg. The patients are almost all in moderate withdrawals by late afternoon and are seeking a way to stop the suffering by supplementing with other drugs. When properly medicated with an adequate dose, this behavior almost always ceases.

 

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