
Acquisition of Medications 04/08/2003
- Updated 10:20 PM ET
Illegal mailed drugs seized
By Julie Appleby, USA TODAY
Shipments of prescription drugs into the United States from all
over the world amount to about 10 million packages a year, according
to a recent FDA estimate. But even the FDA admits its numbers are
just a guess. The total could be far higher.
So many medications are pouring into the USA from overseas, they
say, that it's overwhelming some mail facilities, stretching inspectors
whose main focus since Sept. 11 has been anti-terrorism.
Shipments arriving daily at the mail facilities are not just orders
by senior citizens struggling to buy heart medication. Many packages
contain banned or restricted drugs. Some contain antibiotics, which
when taken indiscriminately can fuel antibiotic resistance.
A day's haul at the Dulles international mail facility outside
Washington, D.C., last week netted about 20 packages containing
drugs, including Valium-like products, which are restricted because
they are addictive, painkiller Phenobarbital, also restricted, and
kits for growing marijuana and hallucinogenic mushrooms.
Some packages of pills are sent through — if they're in
small amounts and don't appear to be banned or restricted substances.
Packages containing restricted drugs are seized, requiring paperwork
by Customs and FDA agents. A letter is sent to the addressee. Few
try to pick up the packages, says Hal Zager, chief inspector for
the Customs and Border Protection unit at Dulles.
Inspectors find the packages as they look for other contraband,
using radiation detectors and X-ray machines. Unclaimed packages
are eventually destroyed. The Dulles mail facility — one of
14 nationwide that inspect international mail — burns about
200 to 300 drug-containing packages a month, Zager says.
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