200,000/yr pts die of medical errors – no charges.. Single doc has two OD deaths and may get 500 yrs sentence

blindjusticeJudge: Montana physician facing 400 felonies not eligible for public defender

http://billingsgazette.com/news/crime/judge-montana-physician-facing-felonies-not-eligible-for-public-defender/article_0d84fa39-42c3-52d2-86f6-d2f3f8e6f8e7.html

I recently blogged about chronic pain refugees in MT

Montana’s ‘Pain Refugees’ Leave State To Get Prescribed Opioids

HAMILTON — A district judge ruled Monday that a Florence physician charged with 400 felonies must pay for his own defense.

Dr. Chris Christensen was initially appointed a public defender following his arrest in August for allegedly providing hundreds of illegal prescriptions to patients.

The state Office of Public Defenders rescinded the appointment of a public defender last month following a review of Christensen’s financial records.

Christensen then took his case directly to Ravalli County District Judge Jeffrey Langton. During a hearing, Christensen said he couldn’t afford the cost of legal representation considering the scale and complicity of the charges.

At that hearing, an official with the Public Defenders Office agreed to provide Langton with Christensen’s application and supporting materials under a privacy seal for the judge to review.

In his ruling, Langton noted that the chief purpose of the Montana Public Defender Act was to provide effective assistance to indigent criminal defendants.

While the law allows for the court to conditionally appoint a public defender for an initial appearance, the Office of Public Defenders is then required to verify whether the defendant meets the criteria for that appointment.

Christensen was initially represented by two attorneys, including Thomas Bartleson of the state’s major crimes unit and a private attorney.

After reviewing the financial records, Langton found that Christensen “does not even come close” to meeting the definition of “indigent” under the law.

“Nor can the Court determine that the disposable income and assets of Christensen and members of his household are insufficient to retain competent private counsel without substantial hardship to him or members of his household,” according to Langton’s ruling. “Any determination to the contrary would undermine the legislature’s legitimate governmental interest in providing taxpayer-funded public defender service to indigent criminal defendants.”

Deputy Ravalli County Attorney Thorin Geist challenged Christensen’s request for a public defender during his initial appearance.

A 16-month investigation found that Christensen’s business in Florence operated almost exclusively in cash, earned about $2,500 a day and grossed more than $500,000 annually, according to an affidavit filed in the case.

Langton ruled earlier that Christensen’s application for a public defender was to be released to the county attorney’s office. In a motion, Geist said the state wanted to see the application to determine if it could lead to additional perjury charges.

No additional charges have been filed.

The 400 felony charges filed against Christensen include two counts of negligent homicide that stem from the death of two patients who were allegedly prescribed methadone by Christensen.

The maximum penalty Christensen faces is 388 life sentences, plus 135 years in prison and fines of $20 million.

Christensen, 67, remains free on a $200,000 bond

A interesting conversation

stevephoneThis week I got a phone call from a young man whose father was all of a sudden the pharmacy that his Father had been getting his prescriptions filled at… refused to fill them any further. Of course, as we all know the earliest that any Pharmacist will fill a Rx is – at most – three days. I am not sure how many days this pt had or didn’t have… but.. he ended up in COLD TURKEY WITHDRAWAL.

This pt has – like many chronic pain pts – a list of co-morbidity issues and for all practical purpose.. is extremely medically fragile … the bottom line is that this pt ended up suffering from a heart attack … luckily … he survived.

All Pharmacists should be very familiar with the potential consequences of cold turkey withdrawal on a pt… the worse being a hypertensive crisis… causing a heart attack, stroke and/or death.

Have we reached the point where pts should be – at the very least – start having an attorney to send letters to these Pharmacists and putting them on notice that if the pt suffers a stroke or especially dies.. that the attorney has been instructed to file manslaughter charges against the Pharmacist for the INTENTIONAL denial of care, pt abandonment, pt abuse for starters..  A Pharmacist is a “learned healthcare professional”… they knew or should have known the potential consequences – including death – for their denial of care.

Every pharmacy is required by Federal/State law to maintain a PERPETUAL INVENTORY on all C-II’s. It will be very easy for an attorney with a subpoena to quickly verify if the pharmacy had inventory on hand to fill the pt’s prescriptions on the date in question.  Verification should take < 5 minutes.

This could also prove or disprove that the pharmacy has been ordering the particular medication and if the wholesaler was rationing the pharmacy and had failed to deliver ordered medication in a timely fashion… and could the wholesaler be also charged with some crime because they knew or should have known that there was a strong possibility that one or more of the pharmacy’s pts could be thrown into cold turkey withdrawal.

It is my recommendation that every pt should audio/video their interactions with the Rx dept staff.  That way their is no doubt about what is say, done or not said or not done.

The question has to be asked… if numerous pts’ attorneys have sent letters to a pharmacy/Pharmacist but a pt died from being thrown into cold turkey who did not have an attorney send a letter.. could the fact that the Pharmacist had been warned about throwing pts into cold turkey withdrawal be used to file charges against the Pharmacist for manslaughter ?

Does the law mandate that the Pharmacist has to be sent a letter regarding a particular pt in order for charges to be filed ?

Veteran Commits Suicide Hours After Being Turned Away At VA Facility

Veteran Commits Suicide Hours After Being Turned Away At VA Facility – Rest In Peace

americanmilitarynews.com/2016/07/veteran-commits-suicide-hours-after-being-turned-away-at-va-facility-rest-in-peace/?utm_source=usmilitary&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=alt

Wasn’t it one of the Presidential candidates that stated something to the fact that the problems with the VA hospitals were OVER BLOWN ?  I wonder if this former Marine’s family would agree with that statement ?

A former Marine and Army National Guardsmen killed himself after being denied admittance to a VA facility in Iowa City, despite telling doctors that he was having “serious mental issues.”

Brandon Ketchum, 33, killed himself only a few hours after being turned down at the Iowa City VA Medical Center on July 7th. He made an emergency appointment with the facility and spoke to doctors about his struggle.

Ketchum had been struggling with PTSD and substance abuse after returning home from his three tours overseas. He had deployed twice to Iraq as a Marine combat engineer where his job was to clear roadside explosives. He also served once in Afghanistan in the Army National Guard.

After getting turned away, Ketchum created a post on social media.

“I requested that I get admitted to 9W (psychiatric ward) and get things straightened out,” he wrote on Facebook. “I truly felt my safety and health were in jeopardy, as I discussed with the doc. Not only did I get a ‘NO’, but three reasons of no based on me being not f***** up enough. At this point I say, ‘why even try anymore?’ They gave up on me, so why shouldn’t I give up on myself? Right now, that is the only viable option given my circumstances and frame of mind.”

 

Brandon’s girlfriend, Kristine Nichols said that he had been having a hard time coping with PTSD and his substance abuse and addiction got worse as he first used painkillers but then moved to heroin.

According to Nichols, Brandon visited the same psychiatrist that he had been seeing for over a year.

“It wasn’t like a new person. He (the psychiatrist) knows Brandon’s history, he knew he was flagged for suicide with the VA,” Nichols told WKOW. “At least two occasions in the past three years he’s been flagged for suicide.”

While serving, he had been through several explosions and ended up with Traumatic Brain Injuries(TBI’s) and concussions.

Jamie Johnson, the public affairs officer for the Iowa City VA Medical Center said in an email to WKOW that there was enough room in the facility to admit Ketchum, and even if there wasn’t they would have found room for him at another facility.

“Generally speaking, I can tell you that we do not have a wait list for beds,” Johnson wrote in the email. “If we have openings and a patient requires admission they are admitted. If a patient requires admission and we do not have beds available at our facility, we would find them a bed at another facility.”

In order to honor Ketchum’s name and help veterans suffering with PTSD and their families, a fellow Marine who served with Ketchum is attempting to create a non-profit retreat in Texas called “Ketchum’s House.”

 

More legislators practicing medicine without a license ?

unclesambadAs lower-dosage law nears, Maine doctors prepare to wean patients off opioids

http://www.pressherald.com/2016/07/27/as-lower-dosage-law-nears-maine-doctors-prepare-to-wean-patients-off-opioids/

How long before these legislators’ actions/laws get challenged for their constitutionality?  How many pts have to be put in a torturous level of pain as healthcare providers “obey the law”… I guess their Hippocratic Oath of doing NO HARM is being superseded by LAWMAKERS.  I know that they think they are doing the right thing..  but as OD deaths continue to increase.. if nothing else from chronic painers committing suicide and be labeled as a opiate OD.

About 16,000 Mainers are affected by the stricter mandate, and some medical professionals worry they will turn to heroin.

Maine lawmakers approved one of the strictest opioid prescribing laws in the country last spring to help address the state’s growing drug epidemic. But doctors worry the law could have the unintended consequence of creating new addicts.

About 16,000 Mainers are currently prescribed high doses of opioids for chronic and acute pain, and the new law means many will have their prescriptions reduced.

 

A physicians group says that could leave patients vulnerable if no safeguards are in place. Those patients may go to the streets to acquire pills illegally – or start using heroin as a substitute.

About three of four new heroin users first abused prescription painkillers, according to the American Society of Addiction Medicine.

The Maine Medical Association, which represents doctors, is launching an aggressive public education program to ensure that the effort to solve one addiction problem doesn’t push people into another.

“We don’t want to just throw people off of this medication. We don’t want people to start getting pills from the streets or taking heroin,” said Gordon Smith, executive vice president of the medical association.

The law goes into effect Friday, and by 2017, thousands of people will be required to lower their doses, some to one-third to one-half of what they are currently prescribed. The law sets maximum doses for many patients at 100 morphine milligram equivalents per day, and mandates that doctors use the state’s prescription monitoring program to track the number and type of prescriptions each patient receives.

Experts say if implemented correctly, the law will have many benefits.

“There is light at the end of that prescription,” said Denise Swyers of Brunswick, who suffers from chronic pain. Swyers was a long-time opioid user but now no longer takes them. She said the quality of her life has improved, and her pain level is the same now as when she was taking opioids, an experience that reflects research on the topic. Swyers now gets pain relief through meditation, exercise, hobbies, ice packs and Advil, as recommended by her doctors.

Smith said his group is touring the state to educate physicians about how best to wean patients off high doses of opioids – 100 morphine milligram equivalents or higher. He said there will be at least 50 meetings with groups of physicians by the end of the year to discuss the new law.

‘A HARD BRIDGE TO CROSS’

The medical association hosted a conference July 14 in the Augusta area to advise doctors on what to say to patients whose doses are being reduced, how to spot signs of addiction and other tips to make the transition smoother.

Eva Quirion, a nurse practitioner in Bangor, said the doctor-patient conversations will be difficult, especially for patients who have been taking the painkillers for years or decades.

“If you say, ‘I have a great idea to help you with your pain, let’s take away your pain pills,’ it sounds like crazy talk,” Quirion said.

But it’s a necessary conversation, and the message will be more effective as more doctors realize the dangers of opioids, Smith said.

Another point Smith and others are trying to drive home is that opioids don’t work for chronic pain. Whether that knowledge is reaching family physicians in Portland, Lewiston, Bangor or Caribou is unknown – there has been no scientific survey of Maine doctors to see what their perceptions are, Smith said.

“Opioids have no proven efficacy for the treatment of chronic pain,” said Dr. Elizabeth Fowlie Mock of Holden. Chronic pain is mild or severe pain that lasts more than three months, according to medical definitions.

The law does provide exceptions to the dosage cap to those who are suffering from acute pain, such as end-of-life, cancer and after-surgery pain.

Pain specialists say many of the 16,000 patients should taper to a lower dose or be weaned completely off opioids, because of their ineffectiveness for chronic pain and because they carry a high risk of overdose. It’s unclear how many physicians are up-to-date on the research compared with those who still go by the prevailing standards of the early- to mid-2000s, when doctors were encouraged to prescribe opioids for many pain conditions.

HIGH USE OF LONG-TERM OPIOIDS IN MAINE

Maine has the highest rate in the nation of prescriptions issued for long-term, extended-release opioids, according to a 2014 report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The long-term opioids, prescribed for chronic pain, are the most likely to be abused, according to the CDC. Maine doctors were prescribing those opioids at a rate more than twice the national average, according to the 2014 report, the latest available.

Maine had a record 272 drug overdose deaths in 2015, most caused by heroin, fentanyl or abuse of prescription opioids.

Now doctors have to try to undo the damage they helped cause, Mock said.

“It’s a really hard bridge to cross, but we have to cross this bridge,” she said.

On a recent day at her Brunswick home, Swyers carefully worked on her artwork – checkerboard and diamond-shaped patterns filling in the outline of a fish. Swyers and a regular group of four artists were practicing “zen tangle,” a meditative form of art that helps her create art and relieve pain at the same time.

The camaraderie also makes her feel better, Swyers said.

Swyers said she was on 50 to 75 morphine milligram equivalents per day of oxycodone to treat fibromyalgia and myofascial pain syndrome, and she had slowly become a “zombie” because she was prescribed ever higher doses as her tolerance increased.

“I was in a fog. I didn’t do anything except sit in my chair,” said Swyers, who estimated she was taking opioids for eight years.

After she stopped taking high doses of oxycodone to treat chronic pain, Denise Swyers of Brunswick, second from left, discovered her pain was the same without the drugs, an experience that aligns with research on the topic. She also found that spending time with friends helped relieve her pain.

After she stopped taking high doses of oxycodone to treat chronic pain, Denise Swyers of Brunswick, second from left, discovered her pain was the same without the drugs, an experience that aligns with research on the topic. She also found that spending time with friends helped relieve her pain.

‘JUST LIVING FOR MY NEXT PILL’

Swyers said she quit “cold turkey” once she heard her slurred speech on her voice mail message.

“I sounded like I was drunk, and I said, ‘That’s it, I’m done,’ ” Swyers said. She quit taking opioids six years ago, she said.

Swyers, 68, said her life immediately changed for the better as her mental sharpness returned and she began enjoying hobbies again, including kayaking, art and reading. Her pain was the same as when she was taking opioids, meaning the pills didn’t help at all, she said.

“When I was taking opioids, I was just living for my next pill,” Swyers said.

Her husband, Bill, became a caretaker, making decisions for her because she was “out of it” most of the time.

“Looking back, I can’t even remember a lot of it. It’s like a whole section of my life is just gone,” Swyers said.

She described her pain as a dull ache primarily in her neck, back, hips and shoulders.

“What I learned is that hurt doesn’t equal harm,” said Swyers, who has worked in sales. “When the brain is distracted, the pain is a lot less.”

Dr. Heidi Decker, a primary care physician in Wilton, said she’s grateful for the new law, which she can refer to when talking with patients who are resistant to seeing their dosage reduced. But the conversations with patients are still difficult – one patient who had taken opioids for many years stormed out of her office when she told him he needed to cut back.

“I thought to myself, ‘Have I just created another heroin addict?’ ” Decker said.

DEALING WITH PATIENT RESISTANCE

Dr. Stephen Hull, director of Mercy Hospital’s Pain Center, said he would like to be optimistic about the fate of the 16,000 patients, but he expects many will resist.

“We don’t know how successful they are going to be on the lower doses,” Hull said.

But the law is needed, because while opioids are useful for acute pain – such as for end-of-life care or post-surgery – they have been proven ineffective and counterproductive at controlling chronic pain, he said.

Patients taking 50 morphine milligram equivalent doses are twice as likely to die from an overdose as a patient who is not taking any opioids, and they are nine times more likely to die at 100 morphine milligram equivalents.

“We have been treating chronic diseases that are not life-threatening with drugs that are,” Hull said.

Dr. Noah Nesin, of Penobscot Community Health, said weaning people off opioids is the right thing to do.

“Let’s make a commitment to engaging with these patients, no matter how badly they treat us, no matter how angry they get, no matter how much they say we’re ruining their lives,” he said.

You decide… Accidental death OR SUICIDE ?

death in this case was a combined overdose of methadone and (alcohol)

http://www.grandforksherald.com/news/region/4082563-overdose-death-leads-reprimand-minnesota-physician

Overdose death leads to reprimand for Minnesota physician

The 2014 overdose death of a patient has led to a local physician being fined and reprimanded by the Minnesota Board of Medical Practice.

Dr. Timothy L. Burke, an infectious-disease specialist for Essentia Health-Duluth Clinic at the time of the incident, was cited for “unethical and unprofessional conduct,” said a news release from the state board earlier this month.

Burke’s medical license, issued by the board in 1995, has been placed on conditional status and he must complete a series of steps for it to be restored. He was also fined a civil penalty of $2,500.

Neither Burke nor his attorney, Steven Schwegman of St. Cloud, could be reached for comment.

A July 2015 internal publication for Essentia Health, Daily Dose, featured a story announcing Burke’s retirement. While retired from practice with Essentia Health, he “still works occasionally as a casual physician,” said Essentia spokeswoman Maureen Talarico in an email. She declined elaboration by adding, “Matters between the Minnesota Board of Medical Practice and the physicians it licenses are separate from the physicians’ relationships with Essentia Health.”

Executive Director Ruth Martinez told the News Tribune the state board has the authority to reprimand its licensed physicians, suspend licenses, invite someone to voluntarily surrender a license and even revoke licenses. The reprimand is a part of a physician’s record forever, she said.

According to a stipulation agreed upon by the board and Burke, filed by the state board, Burke had treated the male patient since 2006, authorizing controlled substances for the patient, including concurrent prescriptions for methadone and clonazepam, “based on the patient’s claims of pain or other symptoms.” The stipulation listed the patient with multiple health issues, including “chemical dependency, polysubstance abuse, mental health issues and personality disorder.”

Burke, the stipulation said, failed the patient in numerous ways related to the medications, including failing “to conduct routine biological fluid screens to monitor” the patient’s compliance with his medication regimen or use of additional drugs and alcohol.

The patient had been living in a group home and when he decided to leave the group home, Burke “explained to the patient that he had a number of reservations” about the patient’s decision based on the his history of alcohol misuse and medication noncompliance.

Upon the patient’s release from the group home, Burke performed an exam and requested the group home release medications to the patient.

The patient was “later found dead,” the stipulation said. An autopsy by a medical examiner determined ” ‘death in this case was accidental and secondary to a combined overdose of methadone and (alcohol).’ ” Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease was also listed as a contributing factor in the man’s death, the stipulation said.

The state board first received a complaint about Burke’s treatment of the patient in August 2014, the stipulation said. The stipulation does not indicate who filed the complaint.

In addition to failing to perform body fluid screenings for medication levels, the stipulation said Burke failed to “document objective clinical findings to support the need for initiating or renewing the medications, failed to explore non-narcotic treatment options, failed to document an overall treatment plan, and failed to provide referrals or establish care,” for the patient with a primary care physician, a psychiatrist or other specialists to coordinate the patient’s overall health care.

While he was in the group home, “the group home maintained control” of the patient’s medications to ensure proper administration, the stipulation said. Burke then “failed to monitor the efficacy of the medications” and “failed to implement a controlled substance contract,” the stipulation said.

In December 2015, Burke appeared before the state board and acknowledged he prescribed the narcotics for the patient, who “had a history of chronic pain, depression, anxiety and alcohol use,” the stipulation said.

In order to petition for the reinstatement of his license unconditionally, Burke is required to read policy for pain control and a clinical guide for responsible opioid prescribing, as well as complete courses on chemical dependency awareness and chronic pain management.

Upon completion of the readings and coursework, he will need to write a paper describing what he learned, how he might treat the patient of the investigation differently, and how he will implement that knowledge into his practice.

Burke is listed in the stipulation as having been born in 1953, with a birthday this month, putting his age at 62 or 63.

According to the story of Burke’s retirement published in the Essentia’s Daily Dose, Burke “was the physician epidemiologist at St. Mary’s Medical Center from 2000 to 2013. He served as chief of the Department of Medicine from 2005 to 2010 and was the chief of Medical Staff from 2011 to 2014.”

Burke wrote columns for the News Tribune during the H1N1 flu crisis in 2012-13 and was often cited as a source for News Tribune stories during flu season. In the Daily Dose publication announcing his retirement, Dr. Rajesh Prabhu described Burke as ” ‘an excellent clinician and universally well respected colleague.’ “

New Data: Illegally obtained opioids is the “driving force” behind epidemic

But just 8.3 percent of those decedents had an active opioid prescription in the same month as their death, DPH said, and in 83 percent of opioid overdose deaths that had a toxicology report completed the person who died had “illegally-obtained or likely illegally-obtained substances” in their system at their time of death.

BOSTON (STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE) – Authorized by a law signed last year to collect information from health care agencies, law enforcement departments, the court system and other state agencies, the Department of Public Health is working to demystify the data and identify previously unseen trends in the state’s opioid crisis.

In a preliminary report filed with the Legislature this month, DPH Commissioner Monica Bharel wrote that other states have already called Massachusetts to learn more about its approach to using data analytics to inform the state’s response to the scourge of opioid misuse and overdose.

“The ability to look as broadly and as deeply at public health data has been a unique challenge, but one that has given us a much greater understanding of the current opioid epidemic,” Bharel wrote. The approach “has enabled Massachusetts to serve as a national example for the possibilities of public health’s ability to leverage data warehousing to respond to pressing policy and health concerns by allowing existing data to be used in new and innovative ways to support policy and decision making.”

Working with the Center for Health Information and Analysis, MassIT, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, MassHealth, the Department of Correction and others, DPH has developed a model that allows for “simultaneous analysis of 10 data sets with information relevant to opioid deaths.”

The collaborative effort to link data sets has allowed DPH to dig into questions like, “Does an abnormally high number of prescribing physicians increase a patient’s risk of fatal overdose?”

The preliminary answer, DPH reported, is yes. The agency reported that the risk of a fatal opioid overdoses is seven times greater for individuals who use three or more prescribers within three months. DPH also reported that the concurrent use of opioids and benzodiazepines is associated with a four-fold increase in risk of a fatal opioid overdose.

The data analytics approach was also used to better understand the link between opioid overdose deaths and the legal use of prescribed opioids. DPH reported that “at least” two out of every three people who died of an opioid overdose had been prescribed an opioid between 2011 and 2014.

But just 8.3 percent of those decedents had an active opioid prescription in the same month as their death, DPH said, and in 83 percent of opioid overdose deaths that had a toxicology report completed the person who died had “illegally-obtained or likely illegally-obtained substances” in their system at their time of death.

In its report, DPH points to the information on illegally-obtained substances as “evidence to support an emerging hypothesis that illegally-obtained substances are the driving force behind” the state’s epidemic.

Since 2000, Massachusetts has seen a 350 percent increase in opioid-related deaths — from 338 in 2000 to an estimated 1,526 in 2015 — including record-setting numbers of deaths in each of the last four years, according to DPH.

 

Robbing pharmacies is KIDS PLAY ?

1-foam-finger

Indiana leads U.S. again in pharmacy robberies

Despite some targeted measures to protect pharmacies, Indiana isn’t shedding its unwanted designation as the No. 1 state for pharmacy robberies.

Consider this statistic: Indiana had more pharmacy robberies from the beginning of 2013 to May of this year than any other state.

Indiana logged 367 robberies, while California — with a population about six times larger — came in second with 310 robberies in the same time period. In 2015, 175 robberies occurred, 132 in Marion County alone, more than the entire state of California for the previous year, said Donna Wall, president of the Indiana Board of Pharmacy.

On Tuesday, the members of the Governor’s Task Force on Drug Enforcement, Treatment, and Prevention mulled these troubling statistics and more as they heard from Wall and others fighting on the front lines to improve the situation.

Randy Hitchens, executive vice president of the Indiana Pharmacists Alliance, said he frequently fields calls from concerned pharmacists. Hitchens has little solace to offer.

“We feel a little weak,” Hitchens said. “We scratch our heads about what we can do.”

Nor is it just traditional robberies in pharmacies. Every time the pharmacy board meets, members have to revoke the license of one or two pharmacy techs because they were diverting pills, Wall said.

But the bulk of the threat does not come from the inside.

Last year, 17 Marion County pharmacies were robbed three times, three pharmacies were robbed four times, and four pharmacies were robbed five times.

“Last year was just a horrible, horrible year,” Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Lt. Craig McCart told the drug task force.

Many stores — especially those in Marion County — have taken steps to improve security, adding armed guards and time release safes to house the most desired medications, mostly opioids such as oxycodone.

Still, there have been 64 pharmacy robberies since the start of the year in Indiana. IMPD considers the fact that it has seen “only” 43 pharmacy robberies since January a relative success.

“It’s still a huge problem, but we really are looking at it as a bit of a victory because we are so far below where we were last year,” McCart said.

“As security measures in Marion County are ramping up, they’re going out to other places,” Wall said.

Whenever police in Louisville, Ky., Cincinnati, Kokomo, Danville or Muncie identify a pharmacy robbery suspect in their jurisdictions, the person almost always hails from Indianapolis, McCart said.

The people behind the robberies have a well-developed system, he said. Rarely do they use what they steal. Often they enlist juveniles, many with no criminal record, offering them $1,000 to $2,000 per job. The juveniles don’t stand to do much jail time even if they get caught.

In some cases, the juveniles take the pills and run out to an older guy, waiting in a car in a parking lot, McCart said. The criminals have become so savvy that in many instances, they have the juvenile give them the stolen pills but keep the bottles in case they are equipped with GPS trackers.

“They’re fairly sophisticated,” McCart said. “Right now, we’re having some degree of success. But it’s still obviously a huge problem.”

The problem has extended to pharmacies statewide, Wall said. Of the seven people on the pharmacy board, one pharmacist, who has his own store, has had a break-in in the past month. Another, who works in a chain, has had two attempted robberies in the past four months.

“This is the type of problem we’re dealing with, and this is why the pharmacy board is really anxious, and anyone in pharmacy is really anxious, about what’s going on here,” Wall said. “So far, we have been really blessed that no one has been injured. … But it’s really scary.”

Call IndyStar reporter Shari Rudavsky at (317) 444-6354. Follow her on Twitter: @srudavsky.

They are suppose to save you money…. BUT ARE THEY ?

Uncovering the group driving up the cost of medication

http://www.10tv.com/article/uncovering-group-driving-cost-medication#

To make sure you are not getting the “short end of the stick”… www.goodrx.com will give you retail prices that you should pay. If your copay – determined by your insurance company… is more than that price… you know that your insurance company is more concerned about their profits than yours costs… Ask the Pharmacist to reverse the claim and either charge you  the www.goodrx.com  price or their normal cash price. Every company has the right to try and make a profit.. but.. not at the expense of overcharging the uninformed or naive.

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Updated: .

When you go to the pharmacy, chances are you expect you are getting a fair price for your medication, especially if insurance is involved. But some local pharmacists want you to know that may not always be the case. They said they are part of an equation that can include some dishonest middlemen, not always, but some of the time.

The traditionally insured prescription world relies on something called the pharmacy benefit manager or PBM.

“A pharmacy benefit manager is the middleman between the insurance company and the pharmacy,” Antonio Ciaccia from the Ohio Pharmacists Association said.

According to Ciaccia, the three biggest middlemen in the business, Express Scripts, CVS Caremark and Optum Rx, represent more than 70 percent of the patients in the U.S. marketplace.

“They are able to use those patient lives to their advantage to negotiate better pricing on drugs or lower reimbursements to pharmacies because of the bodies they represent,” Ciaccia said.

But some pharmacy owners say not all patients are seeing that better pricing. They did not want to share their names because they say they signed contracts to work with the PBMs’ patients and those contracts have rules.

“Part of the provisions in those contracts…explicitly prohibit a pharmacist from saying anything that would be derogatory or negative against the PBM,” Ciaccia explains. That includes letting a customer know when he or she might be paying perhaps more than they should.

He calls money the PBM makes by overcharging the patient a ‘clawback.’

“This isn’t the rule of thumb, but we’re seeing it more and more where the patient is charged a higher co-pay than the cost of the drug would be without insurance,” he said.

One central Ohio pharmacy owner shared PBM paperwork with 10TV, including a transaction for an osteoporosis drug. He said when his employee sent the claim to the PBM via computer, it sent back figures compiled from its non-disclosed databank.

The PBM printout directed the pharmacist to charge the customer a co-pay of $189, way more than the $116 the PBM set for the cost of the drug and to fill the prescription. And way more than the $70 the pharmacy actually paid to acquire the pills.

The pharmacy made a $45 profit, but $73 went back to or stayed with the PBM. It was one case in five pages, most of which were in the $1 to $10 range.

In a recent survey by the National Community Pharmacists Association, 83 percent of 640 independent pharmacists across the country reported seeing at least 10 co-pay clawbacks in the past month.

One local pharmacist called it ‘gouging’ and said some PBMs take advantage of a contract-controlled system that prohibits pharmacists from sharing information with customers. When one of his employees did, “That patient went back to the employer, the employer complained to the PBM, the PBM called us and said if you continue to provide pricing information, we are going to cancel your contract.”

And if the pharmacy lost the contract, it would also lose customers. So silence becomes golden, but some patients question the pharmacist.

“And we try to explain, ‘we’re just the messenger,’,” another local pharmacist said. “We don’t decide these prices.”

Local pharmacists said they don’t exactly know where the money that goes back to the PBM ends up because it’s not clear.

10TV contacted the PBM connected to the prescription example from this story. Because the issue involved a co-pay which is insurance-plan based, Optum Rx pointed us to sister company United Healthcare for plan perspective. It said, “We have reviewed our pharmacy benefits and will update our plans to ensure UHC members pay the lowest price at the pharmacy.”

But critics say when PBMs place drugs in price tiers, they have a hand in the co-pay, too.

Ciaccia says “there is no transparency” and it is so convoluted, it makes it hard for any customer to know what questions to ask.

Industry experts say here are two: How much does the prescription cost?

It might be information the pharmacist can’t offer up, but will sometimes be able to answer if asked.

The other: Where can you go to find drug pricing information so you know if your co-pay is more?

Experts point to NADAC figures on Medicaid.gov that detail the National Average Drug Acquisition costs for a long list of drugs.

Optum Rx would not comment on what pharmacists called the patient overcharge described in this story without being able to see the full transaction. We sent numbers from our story and Optum said that was not enough to draw conclusions.

As for the two other big PBMs, Express Scripts said the co-pay is set by the employer. CVS Caremark said, “If the pharmacy’s cash price is lower than the co-pay, the patient would be charged the lower price.”

Meanwhile, the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association said “patients should not have to pay more than a network drugstore’s submitted charges to the health plan. Nationwide, PBMs are working to reduce the cost of prescription drugs.

In Ohio, PBMs are projected to save the state’s employers, unions, government programs, and consumers $24.7 billion on drug benefit costs over the next decade.”

Independent Pharmacies – where your trust is more important than your money

U.S. Senator Passes Bill to Increase Medical Marijuana Research

U.S. Senator Passes Bill to Increase Medical Marijuana Research

http://blogs.christianpost.com/news-section/u-s-senator-passes-bill-to-increase-medical-marijuana-research-27920/

In Salt Lake City, Senator Orrin Hatch has recently unveiled a bipartisan bill which will allow researchers to perform further study on the potential medical benefits of marijuana. Hatch introduced this regulation along with other senators from Delaware, Hawaii and North Carolina, making a statement in which he said that policymakers are in need of further scientific evidence before they can make better informed decisions about the legalisation of the drug for medical use. He said that in his home state of Utah, debates earlier in the year regarding whether or not to expand marijuana legalisation to medical purposes made clear the need for more and improved scientific research.


Medical Benefits of Marijuana

Marijuana, along with its dozens of active components, has shown some substantial promise for treating a range of different illnesses. However, currently classed as a Schedule I substance, the drug is considered to have no medical benefits or use, and a high potential for abuse. It shares this classification with drugs such as heroin or cocaine, and is currently illegal to study without first going through a range of significant bureaucratic hurdles. Paediatrics chairman at the University of Utah, Dr. Ed Clark, said that he has not yet seen the bill but is in full support of any efforts to open up research on medical cannabis, including studies on the different properties of CBD oil.

Current Research
Although research on marijuana is not yet legal, it is possible to research some of the different compounds of the drug as standalone substances. For example, the University of Utah is currently carrying out research on a cannabidiol product known as Epidiolex and the effects it has on children with epilepsy. Cannabidiol is derived from the marijuana plant put does not contain the substance THC, which causes the ‘high’ of marijuana. In 2013, a law passed in Utah known as ‘Charlie’s Law’ allowed hemp oil to be used to treat people suffering from intractable epilepsy, however, marijuana itself still remains illegal under federal law. Clark believes that marijuana should be controlled, but in a manner which is consistent with the known risks of the drug and based on scientific evidence.

What the Bill Means
The new bill would stop short of requesting that the DEA downgrade marijuana from a Schedule I substance to Schedule II. In a statement, Senator Hatch’s communications director J.P. Freire said that the purpose of the bill is to facilitate research in order to ensure that lawmakers are more informed about whether or not marijuana should be moved from Schedule I to a lower schedule. The bill will also direct the DEA to allow more marijuana growers. As of now, the DEA has issued just once license, which is held by the University of Mississippi, for the growth and cultivation of marijuana for research purposes.

In order to provide lawmakers with more information and research surrounding the medical benefits of marijuana, the bill aims to streamline the DEA approval process and eliminate stringent stipulations regarding the drug set by the DEA.