You choose, we deliver
If you are interested in this story, you might be interested in others from The Journal Gazette. Go to www.journalgazette.net/newsletter and pick the subjects you care most about. We'll deliver your customized daily news report at 3 a.m. Fort Wayne time, right to your email.

Indiana

  • East Indiana man gets 37 years in prison in son’s death
    RICHMOND – An eastern Indiana man has been sentenced to 37 years in prison in the starvation death of his 3-month-old son.
  • IU proposes 1.75 percent tuition increase
    BLOOMINGTON – Indiana University President Michael McRobbie is recommending tuition and fee increases of 1.75 percent for Indiana residents in each of the next two years at the school’s Bloomington campus.
  • Chief justice encourages diligence to alma mater
    U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts on Friday told graduates of the northern Indiana Catholic boarding school he graduated from 40 years ago that persistence is the most essential quality to success and is the only trait each person
Advertisement
File | Photo illustration

Panel OKs stricter limits on cold, sinus meds

INDIANAPOLIS – A Senate panel voted unanimously Tuesday to further restrict the amount of cold medicine consumers can buy.

Senate Bill 496 aims to limit access to ephedrine and pseudoephedrine – primary ingredients in the making of methamphetamine.

It does not require a prescription to buy the products but does institute an annual limit on the amount a person can purchase. This is on top of a pre-existing monthly limit in state law.

Each time a person buys the medicine, it is input into a real-time online system to track the purchases.

Sen. Carlin Yoder, R-Middlebury, said he thinks consumers with seasonal allergies and occasional cold and sinus infections will still be able to buy the medicine they need.

Right now the monthly limit is 7.2 grams. Yoder’s bill also institutes an annual limit of eight months’ worth of the medicine – or about 57 grams.

He equated that to one pill a day. Yoder said if a person needs more than that they should be under the care of a doctor and can get a prescription.

The legislation now moves to the full Senate for consideration.

nkelly@jg.net

Advertisement