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Muscle
Relaxants
The
Soma Pipeline
by Kristina Davis, East Valley Tribune
NOGALES, Mexico - Here, just across the border, neon-colored signs in
the windows of dozens of pharmacies scream "Soma for sale." Salesmen in
white lab coats battle for business on the sidewalks and will readily
fill orders for several thousand of the muscle relaxant pills.
"About 60 percent of the people who buy Soma are the younger people,"
said Israel Sandoval, a manager at Con Vida pharmacy. Pharmacy workers
said they fill Soma orders several times a week for American teenagers,
a trend that has been going on for years. But the Soma pipeline from Mexico
has been largely hush-hush in the East Valley until police broke up a
couple of Soma drug rings recently at local high schools.
A 16-year-old Gilbert girl was arrested last month and later charged with
two drug-related crimes, and seven other teens could face similar charges
after Soma was found at five Mesa and Gilbert schools. Twenty-nine Gilbert
students were suspended in March for buying, possessing or selling the
drug on campus.
As the prescription drug trend has come to the forefront, Mexican officials
say they are cracking down on pharmacies that sell the drug without authorized
prescriptions, while U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration officials plan
to propose placing the drug under federal control.
AN EASY BUY
Soma, or carisoprodol, is a muscle relaxant that requires a prescription
in Arizona. In Mexico, it is sold under the name Somacid, a less expensive
brand manufactured in Guadalajara.
Last month, the Mexican federal Secretariat of Health sent a letter to
Nogales pharmacies warning that Soma was a controlled substance and was
illegal to sell without a prescription from an American or Mexican doctor,
pharmacy employees said.
But Dr. Jaime Leon, an official with the Secretariat of Health in Hermosillo,
Mexico, could not confirm if Soma has been officially reclassified under
the country's General Health Law.
"Unfortunately, a revision would still make it hard to control," Leon
said. "It would still be sold freely."
And that's apparent. Most pharmacies continue to sell the drug with no
questions asked.
A Tribune reporter easily purchased 100 Somacid pills for $30 without
a prescription from Nogales Pharmacy earlier this month. But at other
pharmacies, a prescription was necessary when the reporter identified
herself as such. A prescription, however, can be easily purchased from
pharmacies or local doctors.
"I can write a prescription for $20 extra," offered one salesman from
Discount Pharmacy, the city's largest pharmacy chain. "It will say your
name and take once a day or once an hour, whatever you want."
BRINGING IT HOME
Soma is not only easy to purchase in Mexican pharmacies, but it is legal
to bring across the border in small amounts without a prescription.
All prescription medications from Mexico require a prescription from an
American doctor, said Joyce Jarvis, a supervisor with the U.S. Customs
and Border Protection.
But the customs agency and DEA allow travelers to bring back up to 50
pills per person of any FDA-approved medication from Mexico without a
prescription, federal officials said. The DEA considers that to be a reasonable
amount of pills for legitimate personal medical use.
The pills must be declared to customs officials, or officials can seize
the drug and fine violators the domestic value of the medication.
"We are seeing in recent years the regulations being exploited by some
people bringing the drugs into the U.S. for illicit use," said Ramona
Sanchez, a spokeswoman for the DEA in Phoenix.
The concern has prompted DEA officials to look at making Soma a federally
controlled substance, which would place enforcement duties with the DEA
instead of local police. A federal jurisdiction would mean harsher sentences
for Soma buyers, distributors and traffickers.
Sanchez said the DEA is beginning the process by gathering information
on Soma for a report to be presented to the Department of Health and Human
Services to reclassify the drug.
"When we see teens abusing a drug like this, you can bet it will slowly
creep into our radar. We take it very seriously," Sanchez said. "Hopefully
it will prompt Mexican authorities that the problem is filtering in through
the U.S."
Soma (carisoprodol)
Soma is a prescription muscle relaxant manufactured
in the United States.
Alcohol-like effects include wooziness, drowsiness
and giddiness.
Abuse of the drug can result in addiction, seizures,
coma or death.
Somacid is a Mexican brand manufactured in Guadalajara.
In Mexico, Soma costs $30 to $35 and Somacid
costs $18 to $30 for two 50-pill bottles.
In the United States, street value is $1 to
$5 per 350 mg pill.
Source: http://www.drugfreeaz.com/news/articles_soma.html
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