Summary
- MethShield launched in Jackson County Missouri
- Systems works to monitor pseudoephedrine sales to prevent their illicit diversion into mehtamphetamines
Jackson County law enforcement officials on
Monday announced a program they touted as a major step toward quelling illegal
meth production.
The program, known as MethShield, will be
tested in Jackson County at no charge to taxpayers. It originated in Australia,
where its promoters say it has reduced methamphetamine production by 37
percent.
The program will enable law enforcement to
track, through a real-time computer system, the sale of over-the-counter
medications used to manufacture meth.
At participating pharmacies, purchases of
pseudoephedrine — a key ingredient in meth — will be tracked and limited.
Law enforcement officials also would be
notified of people who were denied purchases.
County Executive Mike Sanders said the
program “will help us track those who want to sell poison in our community.”
The program already is under way, he said.
Shaun Singleton, chief executive of
MethShield, said not all the major pharmacy chains have agreed to participate.
County officials declined to name which ones.
Not all pharmacies participated when the
program began in Australia, Singleton said. But 98 percent of pharmacies have
been won over, he said.
Singleton said a similar program already has
begun in 72 western Kansas counties. In Jackson County, he said, his company
hopes to demonstrate the program’s value in the hopes of winning future
government funding.
Singleton said the purchase limits are high
enough that people with chronic conditions can get the medication they need
without hassle.
County officials said another hope for future
funding is that pharmacies find a way to finance the program in order to avoid
prescriptions being required for pseudoephedrine.
Singleton said the cost of such a program to
a county the size of Jackson would be about $40,000.
Sourced from KansasCity.com