To help cut costs, the Baltimore Substance Abuse Systems Inc., which manages most of the budgets for nearly all of the participating addiction treatment centers in Baltimore, has started buying in bulk, said Marla Oros, a consultant with BSAS.
The city's first report on its initiative in July 2007 made little mention of efforts to prevent misuse and illegal sales of buprenorphine. In December, The Sun published a three-part series that showed that abuse of Suboxone was on the rise across the nation as its availability increased. The drug was rolled out in 2003 after the federal government allowed doctors to prescribe it from their offices, unlike methadone, which is dispensed from highly regulated clinics.
The latest report devotes an entire section to efforts that the city has taken to minimize misuse of the drug: counting pills, testing urine and monitoring patients when they first start taking the pills. But the report states that "there is no evidence of a significant public health threat from buprenorphine diversion in Baltimore at this time."
