Attorney General Masto Calls on FDA to Make Generic Pain Pills Harder to Abuse


March 11, 2013

Joined by 47 Other AGs in Calling for More Tamper and Abuse Resistant Prescription Drugs

    Las Vegas, NV - Generic versions of popular pain relievers must be made harder to abuse, Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto and 47 other state and territorial attorneys general told federal officials in a letter sent today by the National Association of Attorneys General. The letter encourages the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to adopt standards requiring manufacturers and marketers of generic prescription painkillers to develop tamper- and abuse-resistant versions of their products.

    “In Nevada, prescription painkillers used non-medically kills, said Masto. “We need to do more to prevent abuse and death by ensuring generic pain pills are tamper resistant.”

      “Adding new physical and chemical features to prescription opioids to deter abuse could reduce misuse of these drugs and the sometimes deadly consequences. These products can be part of a comprehensive approach which should include prevention, interdiction, prosecution and substance-abuse treatment,” the letter states.

        Prescription drug abuse is on the rise across the country, and prescription pain relievers are among the most commonly abused drugs. Name-brand versions of painkillers such as OxyContin have taken steps to make it more difficult to abuse their drugs, for example by making it harder to crush pills which abusers do in order to inject or snort the drug.

          “In our states, nonmedical users are shifting away from the new tamper-resistant formulations to non-tamper-resistant formulations of other opioids as well as to illegal drugs. There is great concern in our law enforcement community that many non-tamper-resistant products are available for abuse when only a few products have been formulated with tamper-resistant features,” the attorneys general wrote in their letter to the FDA.

            When abused or used incorrectly, prescription drugs can be deadly. Fatal drug overdoses are now the leading cause of death due to unintentional injury in the United States exceeding even motor vehicle deaths, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

              To read the letter and/or find a list of the participating attorneys general click the link below.

              Combating prescription drug abuse

              Masto chairs the Attorney General's Substance Abuse Working Group, which was created by Assembly Bill 61 of the 76th session of the Nevada Legislature.

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