Cough syrup bill returns

Published 6:56 am Monday, February 19, 2007

By Staff
WASHINGTON – U.S. Reps. Fred Upton, R-Mich., and Rick Larsen, D-Wash., have re-introduced bipartisan legislation to crack down on the bulk sale of dextromethorphan (DXM), an ingredient of cough syrup that kids are abusing to get high.
The Dextromethorphan Distribution Act of 2007 (H.R. 970) makes it illegal to distribute unfinished DXM to a person or company not registered with the FDA and will help prevent the abuse of this drug, which has resulted in deaths across the country. This bipartisan legislation passed the House in 2006.
"As a parent of two teenagers, I am alarmed by the number of teens abusing cough syrup and pure DXM to get a high," said Upton. "Kids are under the false impression that getting high off of DXM is harmless because it is an ingredient in cough syrup. Nothing can be further from the truth. Our kids are playing a game of Russian roulette each time they get high off of DXM. Sooner or later, someone dies – enough is enough.
"As it stands, DXM is only a click of a mouse away from arriving on our kids' doorsteps. This common sense piece of legislation will put an end to the bulk sale of DXM over the Internet, and keep our kids safe from the dangers of this type of drug abuse."
DXM is a non-narcotic cough suppressant used in many over-the-counter cough and cold medicines. While medicines containing DXM are used safely by millions of Americans each year, taken in extremely large quantities DXM produces a hallucinogenic high and can cause brain damage, seizures and death.
Studies have shown that teenagers are obtaining unfinished DXM to get high by consuming large amounts of the powder or mixing it with alcohol.
Recent research indicates that abuse of DXM has increased sharply in recent years.
According to the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, one in 11 teenagers have used cough medicines to get high.
"The only people who should be buying unfinished DXM are those who manufacture cough and cold medications," said Larsen. "This common sense bill will protect our children from a new breed of drug dealer selling dangerous substances over the Internet."
In April 2005, two teenagers from Larsen's Washington district overdosed on DXM they had purchased online. Investigation of their deaths showed the teenagers ordered the drug over the Internet from two men in Indiana who were selling pure DXM after obtaining it from sources in India. Three other children from Florida and Virginia also died from overdosing on DXM they purchased from the same two men.
There are a number of disreputable Web sites that provide "how-to" guides to get high off of DXM.
These sites include information recommending how much DXM to use and suggest other drugs to combine with DXM.