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A North Carolina woman pleaded guilty after she was caught fraudulently obtaining more than 8,000 hydrocodone opioid pills—all using a Duke neurosurgeon’s name and DEA number.

Heather Smith Elliott, from Burlington, N.C., pleaded guilty Oct. 4 in the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina to two counts of using forged and fraudulent prescriptions to obtain the hydrocodone pills, one count of wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft. She forged 132 prescriptions for herself, family members and friends for hydrocodone, a pain-relieving opioid and Schedule II controlled substance.

As unusual as this case seems, Professor of Medicine Lawrence Greenblatt argued that it is just that—unusual.

“Fraudulent prescriptions are a tiny percentage of the total of prescription pills that are being abused out there,” said Greenblatt, also co-leader of the Duke Opioid Safety Task Force. “It’s really not a significant problem.”

However, Greenblatt added that he believed that physicians could learn several lessons from this case. He said doctors must be careful with their paper prescription pads, which are sent to pharmacies when a drug is prescribed. Those pads, however, may become a relic of the past with universal electronic prescribing, he explained.

Udobi Campbell, associate chief pharmacy officer of Duke Ambulatory Pharmacy Services, stressed the importance of electronic prescribing.

“We take our performance for e-prescribing very seriously at Duke,” she wrote in an email. “In fact, it is monitored as one of our medication safety metrics that is reported out to hospital leadership.”

Nevertheless, not all controlled substances are prescribed electronically yet, Campbell noted, because broad system changes are still needed.

Another point of emphasis for Greenblatt was the statewide Controlled Substance Reporting System (CSRS)—a database where physicians and pharmacists can see a patient’s opioid prescription record and where doctors can check their own prescriptions.