CLAYTON, Mo. (AP) — St. Louis County leaders are pushing legislation to monitor distribution of prescription medicines that can serve as a gateway to heroin addiction.
County Executive Steve Stenger said Tuesday that the county legislation is necessary because Missouri is the nation’s only state that has failed to establish a database to track opioids prescribed by doctors.
Stenger, a Democrat, calls heroin abuse “a deadly epidemic” in the St. Louis region, where more than 2,700 residents have died from a heroin or opioid-related overdose in the past seven years.
Meanwhile, Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat, was in suburban St. Louis Tuesday to hear concerns about opioid abuse.
Criticism among lawmakers centers on privacy concerns over a government-run database with medical information.