Copay or you-pay? Prescription drug clawbacks draw fire

FOX 8 WVUE New Orleans News, Weather, Sports, Social

Copay or you-pay? Prescription drug clawbacks draw fire

http://www.fox8live.com/clip/12412460/zurik-copay-or-you-pay-prescription-drug-clawbacks-draw-fire

 

 

FOX 8 WVUE New Orleans News, Weather, Sports, Social

http://www.fox8live.com/clip/12423777/zurik-unitedoptum-defends-prescription-overpayment-program

CNN: Doctors must lead us out of our opioid abuse epidemic

mtmolehill1Doctors must lead us out of our opioid abuse epidemic

There are some video clips of the show, could not find a link to the entire 60 minute piece.  Since there is one opiate substance abusers for every 19 chronic pain pt… this show had ONE chronic pain pt talking about how her quality of life was dependent on the opiates that she had been taking for a decade or more and then they had “19” people (substance abusers, parents, spouses, etc, etc) with their  sob stories of how they were a functioning addict and/or lost someone to a opiate OD..  of course, all of those OD’s were unintentional/accidental deaths… not the first one committed a suicide.. even though we have ONE MILLION suicide attempts and 50,000 successful suicides every year.

http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/11/health/sanjay-gupta-prescription-addiction-doctors-must-lead/?iid=ob_homepage_deskrecommended_pool

(CNN)Veteran doctors don’t need a blood test to tell when someone is on the verge of a drug overdose. They can even narrow down the culprit by observation alone. Dilated pupils mean cocaine, amphetamines, maybe LSD. Constricted pupils mean an opiate.

Additionally, an opiate abuser is characteristically “nodding out” and often scratching their itchy skin. While their face is becoming pale and clammy, their fingernails and lips are starting to turn blue or even a sickly purplish-black. When the choking noises — or the deep snore gurgling sounds, known as the death rattle — begins, it’s time to act — and fast. That is a pretty clear sign the opiates have just turned off the person’s drive to breathe and they are in the throes of an overdose.
It is an awful sight, and yet someone in this country dies like this every 19 minutes. There is no other medication routinely used for a nonfatal condition that kills patients so frequently. The majority of those deaths result from prescription opioid medications, such as hydrocodone, OxyContin and Percocet.
It is so common that specialists even have a profile for the most typical victim: non-Hispanic Caucasian male, mid 30s. Initial diagnosis: back pain due to trauma, surgery or degenerative arthritis. And, most remarkably, average time from first prescription to time of overdose death: just 31 months.
This is a public health epidemic and one that is uniquely American. No other country in the world has the perverse amount of consumption as we do in the United States. And nowhere do we pay the price as dearly as with prescription opioid medications.
As of 2011, 75% of the world’s opioid prescription drugs are prescribed and swallowed up in a country that makes up less than 5% of the world’s population, leading to the most common cause of preventable death in America today. It is a horrifying and shameful statistic.
And, having traveled all over the world covering natural disaster, wars and famine, I am fully confident we Americans don’t have 75% of the world’s pain.

Who is at fault?

There is plenty of blame to go around. Drugs are cheaper than a multidisciplinary approach to treating pain, and cost savings are what insurance companies like to hear.
For decades, certain pharmaceutical companies misled the FDA about the risks of opioid dependence in an effort to sell more of the drugs, and three top executives from Purdue Pharma even pleaded guilty to those criminal charges.
Our federal government has created nearly insurmountable hurdles to studying other therapies such as medicinal marijuana, which has for years been used safely and effectively in other countries for chronic neuropathic pain, one of the most difficult types to treat.
Addicted? How to get help

If you’re addicted to prescription drugs, help is available. You can call the Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration 24/7 hotline at 1-800-662-HELP(4357) or visit their website.

Most of the blame, however, belongs on the shoulders of the American doctors themselves. I am a practicing neurosurgeon, and this is not an easy thing to acknowledge. The fact is, we have accepted the tall tales and Pollyannaish promises of what these medications could do for too long. As a community, we weren’t skeptical enough. We didn’t ask enough questions. We accepted flimsy scientific data as gospel and preached it to our patients in a chamber that echoed loudly for decades.
Even worse, too many doctors who didn’t actually believe the hyperbole surrounding opioids doled out long-term prescriptions regardless, in the same way doctors write antibiotic prescriptions for viral illnesses. In both cases, they don’t work. In both cases, they can cause colossal harm.

The King of Pain

It was a particular American doctor who, in many ways, started all of this. If you want to identify a specific moment this opioid epidemic sprouted wings, many would point to a paper written 30 years ago this month.
Based on a study of just 38 patients in 1986, Dr. Russell Portenoy challenged the conventional wisdom. Up until that time, opioids had been reserved for cancer patients and palliative care and only for short durations because of the concern about addiction. Dr. Portenoy, armed with his small study, believed prescription opioids could safely be used in all patients with chronic pain for years on end. He maintained that the drugs were easy to quit and that overdoses hardly ever occurred.

House & Senate passing bills to fight opioid addiction

cryingeyevoteHouse passing bills to fight opioid addiction

http://www.jconline.com/story/news/politics/2016/05/11/house-passing-bills-fight-opioid-addiction/84250820/

WASHINGTON — The House Wednesday moved to pass a bipartisan package of bills to battle America’s growing epidemic of painkiller abuse and heroin addiction, but the White House said the legislation won’t accomplish much unless Congress provides more than $1 billion to fund the new programs.

House members are expected to overwhelmingly pass a total of 18 bills this week focused on opioid addiction, treatment and prevention.

On Wednesday, the House voted 412-4 to approve a bill by Rep. Susan Brooks, R-Ind., and Joe Kennedy, D-Mass., to create an interagency task force to update standards for doctors to manage their patients’ pain and prescribe painkillers.

“We’ve got to get people off of the pain meds, so these people will not turn to heroin,” Brooks said.

The House also approved by voice vote a bill by Rep. Larry Bucshon encouraging the Obama administration to raise the limit on the number of patients a doctor can treat with a mild narcotic that helps addicts cope with withdrawal symptoms, making it easier for an addict to find a doctor who can prescribe the drug.

“The evidence is clear that this epidemic is growing and will continue to grow unless immediate action is taken,” Bucshon said.

The House has devoted the majority of this week to the issue. Their bills must be reconciled with legislation already approved by the Senate.

Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., praised the bipartisan action but said it must be fully funded to do any good. Democrats offered an amendment to provide $600 million in emergency funding, but it was blocked by Republicans who said the money will come later when Congress passes its 2017 spending bills for federal agencies.

“We need to not only pass these bills, but we need to commit in a bipartisan way that we’re going to provide the necessary funding, and I hope we can do that,” McGovern said. “If we don’t do that, all the speeches that we give this week will amount to empty rhetoric.”

The White House echoed that sentiment in a statement Tuesday night that noted that four in five new heroin users started out by abusing prescription pain medicine. President Barack Obama has requested $1.1 billion to fight opioid addiction.

Each day, 44 people die in the United States from an overdose of prescription painkillers, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Drug overdose is now the the leading cause of accidental death in the U.S., surpassing car crashes, according to the American Society of Addiction Medicine.

“These trends will not change by simply authorizing new grant programs, studies and reports,” the White House said. “Congressional action is needed to fund the tools communities need to confront this epidemic and accelerate important policies like training health care providers on appropriate opioid prescribing, an essential component of this effort.”

Indiana exceeded all but eight states in the number of pain prescriptions written per 100 people in 2012 — more than a bottle of pills for every Hoosier, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Yet only five states rank lower than Indiana in the ability of opioid addicts to access buprenorphine, a drug used in treatment programs to reduce opioid cravings.

It’s also a national issue as the federal government limits doctors to treating 100 opioid addicts at a time with buprenorphine, which has been proven far more effective than detox or abstinence.

The administration has proposed raising the limit to 200 patients.

“Are we firm in our commitment to combat the addiction to heroin?” asked Rep. Paul Tonko, D-N.Y.

Bucshon spokesman Nick McGee said Bucshon hopes the original version of the legislation is ultimately approved when the House bill is reconciled with the Senate bill, as long as it is paid for. The Senate bill would raise the limit to 500 patients.

In addition to encouraging an increase in the patient limit on buprenorphine treatment, the bill would modify rules to expand treatment access in other ways. It would also allow prescriptions for addictive drugs to be partially filled to reduce the risk of abuse.

In March, the Senate voted 94-1 to pass the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act. The bill authorizes the attorney general to provide grants to states, local governments and nonprofit groups for programs to strengthen prescription drug monitoring, improve treatment for addicts, and expand prevention, education and law enforcement initiatives.

The legislation authorizes $725 million for federal grants but does not allocate any actual funds, which would have to be approved as part of legislation to fund federal agencies for the 2017 fiscal year. Senate Republicans blocked an effort by Democrats to add $600 million in emergency money to the bill.

Email Maureen Groppe at mgroppe@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter: @mgroppe

How long will they be able to keep this story in the news cycle ?

SRAcrystalballIMO.. the medical examiner will sit on the toxicology report until the edges of the paper report turns up and turns BROWN… so that the judicial system and the media can “ride” this “overdose story” for as long as possible. They don’t  often get a high profile person that dies with a potential of opiate overdose being involved.  Just watch, in the end.. because Prince had some opiates in his system… his death will be labeled as a “opiate related death”.. even if other co-morbidity health issue could have been the real cause but because there is not a definitive natural cause of death.

 

Prince’s Paisley Park Home Raided by DEA: All the Details

http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/princes-paisley-park-raided-by-dea-all-the-details-w206011

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and local sheriff’s deputies raided Prince’s Paisley Park compound in Chanhassen, Minnesota, on Tuesday, May 10, as part of an ongoing investigation into the “Purple Rain” singer’s April 21 death, CNN reported, citing a law enforcement official.

According to the Associated Press, a Carver County sheriff’s vehicle entered through the gates of Paisley Park along with about a dozen unmarked vehicles. The raid comes after a search warrant obtained by the Los Angeles Times revealed, according to the AP, that a Minnesota doctor named Michael Todd Schulenberg prescribed “medications and prescriptions” to Prince prior to his death.

“Detectives are revisiting the scene at Paisley Park as a component of a complete investigation. No other information is available. 802jk,” the Carver County Sherrif’s Office tweeted Tuesday afternoon.

Chief Deputy Jason Kamerud would not expand upon the search, but told the AP on Tuesday by phone that investigators are “being thorough.”

Prince, who was found unconscious at Paisley Park on April 21, was reportedly prescribed opioid medications. According to multiple reports, law enforcement officials are trying to determine if the late icon was unlawfully prescribed medications prior to his death.

As previously reported, authorities are considering overdose as Prince’s cause of death. An autopsy was completed on Friday, April 22, but the results are still pending.

We’re continuing to investigate the circumstances of Prince’s death,” Kamerud previously told Us. “The [medical examiner] will provide toxicology results with her findings.”

 

Houston School Thinks $2 Bill is Counterfeit, Calls Police on 13-Year-Old Girl

lmaoHouston School Thinks $2 Bill is Counterfeit, Calls Police on 13-Year-Old Girl

https://generationopportunity.org/articles/2016/05/06/houston-school-thinks-2-bill-is-counterfeit-calls-police-on-13-year-old-girl/

Though rarely produced, the $2 bill is still a perfectly acceptable and legal tender in the United States. However, according to one school in Houston, Texas, $2 bills are counterfeit currency.

13-year-old Danesiah Neal waited in her school’s lunch line to pay for her chicken nuggets. When the time came for her to make payment, she handed her lunch lady the $2 bill her grandmother had given her that morning. Believing the rare but legal form of currency to be fake, the lunch lady denied Neal her lunch and sent her to the office.

However, when Neal was sent to the office it wasn’t to give her side of the story to her principal or another school administrator. Instead, Neal was met by police officers who told her that she could be in big trouble for attempting to use counterfeit money.

“She’s never in trouble, so I was nervous going in there,” Neal’s grandmother, Sharon Kay Joseph told ABC after the school called her and asked her to come in. After trying to explain the situation to officers, the police were not buying the story Joseph gave them. “’Did you give Danesiah a $2 bill for lunch?” Joseph was asked by officers. “He told me it was fake.”

The bill Joseph had given to Neal that morning dated back to 1953, and as such, the counterfeit pen did not work on the bill.  However, after an extensive investigation the officers realized that the bill was, in fact, an acceptable form of currency and handed it back to Joseph.

“He brought me my two dollar bill back,” Joseph said. He didn’t apologize. “He should have and the school should have because they pulled Danesiah out of lunch and she didn’t eat lunch that day because they took her money.”

Misunderstandings happen, we are all human and prone to error. However, the most concerning aspect of this situation is the fact that police were called to come deal with an 8th grade girl who had not committed any form of criminal wrongdoing. If any member of the faculty had suspected that the $2 bill was counterfeit, a simple trip to the office to straighten out the situation would have been sufficient enough to calm all concerns.

This story reflects a trend occurring in this country where police officers are routinely being called in to deal with disciplinary actions involving students in K-12 institutions. A few months ago, police were called on another  young student because her use of emoji’s on social media were viewed as threatening by school administrators.

Additionally, this is a 13-year-old girl was not permitted to eat lunch that day because of ignorance on the part of school officials, and not because of any fault of her own. Treating school-age children as if they are criminals because of a simple misunderstanding trains them to live in a world of overcriminalization.

Instead of assuming the worst, school administrators should be doing all they can to protect the interests of their students, instead of treating them like common criminals.

Obamacare has a discrimination clause ? #CVS being sued for violation

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13220073_10204626121893191_997996630_n13220127_10204626121853190_1074075178_n

 

Judicial system using “defective THC test” to convict person of DUI ?

Marijuana DUI laws have no scientific basis, AAA study finds

blog.sfgate.com/smellthetruth/2016/05/10/marijuana-dui-laws-have-no-scientific-basis-aaa-study-finds/

States that drug test drivers for marijuana are not using accurate scientific method, a new study concludes.

A study released on Tuesday by AAA’s traffic safety foundation found that setting a blood test limit for marijuana is impossible, the Associated Press reports.

“There is understandably a strong desire by both lawmakers and the public to create legal limits for marijuana impairment in the same manner we do alcohol,” said Marshall Doney, AAA’s president and CEO, to the AP. “In the case of marijuana, this approach is flawed and not supported by scientific research.”
According to the study published by the nation’s largest automobile club, the problem in setting marijuana DUI limits is that cannabis is metabolized much differently than alcohol. Some drivers with relatively high levels of marijuana’s psychoactive compound THC were found to not be impaired at all, while drivers with comparably smaller levels may be more dangerous behind the wheel, especially if that person is not a regular user. There is no scientific proof that all people become impaired at an exact blood limit for THC. Getting charged fоr DUI іѕ nоt ѕuсh a small issue anymore аѕ states hаvе tightened thе legal noose аrоund DUI driving аnd impose a variety оf fines аnd restrictions оn offenders. Evеn іf уоu аrе a first-time offender, уоu соuld bе looking аt a heavy fine, suspension оf уоur driving license, оr еvеn a jail sentence depending оn thе seriousness оf thе charges аgаіnѕt уоu.For avoiding situation like these,Keep in mind to be in touch with New Jersey DUI lawyer.  In case уоu аrе convicted оf a DUI charge уоur present job wоuld bе undеr threat whіlе уоu wоuld аlѕо hаvе a tougher tіmе іn searching fоr a job іn future аѕ уоu wоuld nоw bе branded аѕ a criminal wіth a record. Seattle DUI lawyer helps you in the DUI attorney cases.  In addition, уоur car insurance company wоuld аlѕо increase insurance premiums duе tо уоur conviction. Thuѕ, іt іѕ оf utmost importance thаt уоu hire thе services оf аn extremely competent Tampa DUI lawyer thаt hаѕ sufficient knowledge аnd experience іn handling ѕuсh cases.

 

Moreover, frequent marijuana users can be tested for high levels of THC even several days after they last used pot, while infrequent users can rid their system in considerably shorter periods of time.

The study backed by the support of DUID laws for California state, also proved that there are far more worrisome distractions than driving while high. Experts found that using marijuana roughly doubles the risk associated with driving, but driving while talking on a hands-free cellphone actually quadrupled the crash risk. A blood alcohol content of .12 — the average median blood level found in most drunk driving cases — raised the risk by about 15 times.

Lafayette woman positive for THC sentenced in deadly crash

wlfi.com/2016/05/11/lafayette-woman-positive-for-thc-sentenced-in-deadly-crash/

BOONE COUNTY, Ind. (WISH/WLFI) — A judge sentenced a Lafayette woman Wednesday for causing the August 2015 car crash that took a Purdue employee’s life.

Thirty-three-year-old Stephanie Shrock, a dental hygienist in Lafayette, entered a plea agreement in March for the crash on U.S. 52 near State Road 47. Her plea agreement was amended with a sentencing of three years on community corrections, but it’s up to Judge Bruce Petit to decide.

The undated booking photo of Stephanie Shrock if shown. (Photo Provided/Boone County Sheriff's Office)
The undated booking photo of Stephanie Shrock if shown. (Photo Provided/Boone County Sheriff’s Office)

On Wednesday, Shrock was sentenced to six years. However, due to her plea agreement, she will be on supervised probation for five years and 340 days and three of those years will be on house arrest. The judge also suspended her driving privileges for two years.

A psychologist testified that Shrock suffered from severe survivor’s guilt, depression and anxiety following the crash. The psychologist said she was very upset by what the family thought upon hearing that the driver was “intoxicated,” though Shrock said she felt no affects of drug use the morning of the crash.

In the courtroom Wednesday morning, Shrock tearfully recalls the events of Aug. 18.

“I didn’t feel fuzzy, I didn’t feel clouded,” Shrock said. “I did not at all feel impaired.”

Shrock said her use of marijuana was infrequent and she didn’t feel affects of the drug at all that day. Shrock told the court Wednesday the last time she used marijuana was two days before crash.

“It wasn’t a frequent thing,” she said.

During the hearing, Shrock turned to the victim’s family and cried. She told the family this:

“I have thought of all of you every single day and the guilt that I feel on taking away your person, your loved one, your family. I’m so sorry. It’s unimaginable what you guys are going through. I was so angry for you that on top of all the emotions you’re dealing with then you find out if that person had not only smoked that morning, which of course I didn’t. I’m so sorry that we are sitting here, that this is how we are meeting. I hope that you can continue on the path of healing, which is so vital. I pray for your comfort.”

The family was also in tears. Shrock offers that she would like a relationship with victim’s family if they are at all comfortable.

Shrock will learn her fate for charges including causing death when operating a motor vehicle with a schedule I or II controlled substance in the blood, a level four felony. Four other charges, a felony and three misdemeanors, were dropped as part of the agreement.

Shrock was accused of driving with THC in her system when she caused the crash that killed 45-year-old Jacquelin Harp, who worked at Purdue University.

Investigators said Shrock was reaching for a cup of coffee when she drove off the roadway, over corrected, crossed the median and struck Harp’s vehicle head-on.

Court documents also said that Shrock’s urine tests came back positive for cannabinoids.

After the August 2015 crash, a temporary light was installed at the intersection of State Road 52 and State Road 47 following an outcry of support, including a post by the Boone County sheriff. The Indiana Department of Transportation announced Nov. 16, 2015, roughly three months later, the stoplight would become a permanent addition.

The pharmacists consulted with the patient’s prescriber and, using their professional judgment, decided the pt’s best served by throwing her into cold turkey withdrawal


Crackdown on prescription drug abuse hurts pain management patients

http://wfla.com/2016/03/24/crackdown-on-prescription-drug-abuse-hurts-pain-management-patients/

TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) – State and federal crackdowns on prescription drug abuse have led to unintended consequences for chronic pain patients who rely on narcotics to function, patients and doctors tell 8 On Your Side.

Patti DeSalvo called 8 On Your Side when her Walgreens pharmacist recently cut her off, refusing to fill any prescriptions for Oxycontin and Morphine – at any Walgreens location. Without the medication, DeSalvo says she can barely get out of bed. 

“Pain like you would not believe,” she said. “I mean, my whole body aches.”

It’s all because of a car accident, followed by damaged discs in DeSalvo’s back, severe arthritis and now lupus. She’s taken pain pills for nearly five years and says Walgreens wouldn’t give her an explanation as to why they no longer wanted her as a customer.

Walgreens sent this statement to 8 On Your Side:

“We have looked into this matter. The pharmacists consulted with the patient’s prescriber and, using their professional judgment, acted in the patient’s best interest.”

It’s not just Walgreens turning away patients including DeSalvo. She says other pharmacists tell her they don’t have the medication in stock or they require pain medication customers to have at least six prescriptions.

“I don’t know where I’m going to get my medication next month, but yet your drug dealers know where they’re getting theirs,” DeSalvo said.

8 On Your Side has heard this before. After state and federal crackdowns on pain pill abuse, some can’t get the medication they need.

Dr. Jeffrey Singer, a surgeon and Cato Institute scholar, says the government has gone too far. While he does not want to see drug abuse, legitimate patients now suffer from this unintended consequence, Singer said. He also worries that long-time pain patients who are dependent on the medication will turn to alternatives from the street, such has buying pills from drug dealers or even turning to heroin.

“It casts a chilling effect and makes them feel like, ‘I’d better cut back on writing these prescriptions because I don’t want to get into trouble,’” Singer said.

Once the script is written, a pharmacist makes the final decision. And government regulators are watching.

“The pharmacist is feeling the same pressure that the physician is feeling,” Singer says.

They let these people twist in the wind,” Daniels said of federal prosecutors

Area hospitals fear an influx of patients seeking pain medications in the wake of the shutdown of Dr. Eugene Gosy’s medical office. (Robert Kirkham/Buffalo News)

Local ERs prepare for deluge of opiate patients

http://www.buffalonews.com/city-region/medical/local-ers-prepare-for-deluge-of-opiate-patients-20160507

Emergency rooms in Buffalo area hospitals are preparing for a deluge of opioid patients.

ER doctors operate on the front line of the opioid epidemic gripping Erie County and the rest of the country. They deal with people in pain, as well as those addicted to opioids. They see the overdoses and the deaths.

Now, they face an additional challenge.

After Dr. Eugene Gosy’s practice was shut down two weeks ago following his indictment on federal charges of unlawfully distributing narcotics, some of his patients are showing up at area emergency rooms looking for relief from pain, which is his specialty. Gosy & Associates in Amherst was one of the busiest pain-management practices in New York State, treating thousands of patients.

Not long after Gosy’s office closed, emergency departments rolled out new guidelines for prescribing opioids. The hospitals want clear protocols for staff and a united front as Gosy’s patients on narcotic painkillers, needing refills or unsure about the future of their care, seek continued treatment elsewhere.

Patients hoping for the continued treatment of chronic pain or refills of narcotic painkillers probably will be disappointed.

The new guidelines state that a primary care physician outside the emergency department who can follow a patient’s treatment should provide all opioids, such as Oxycontin and hydrocodone, for chronic pain.

The guidelines allow for treating acute pain but state that prescriptions should be for the shortest duration appropriate.

“Everyone expedited this. We needed a health system answer, and we needed it now,” said Dr. Robert F. McCormack, chief of service for emergency medicine at Kaleida Health.

Hospitals report that patients from Gosy’s practice, who were given no advance notice, already have begun to visit emergency departments looking for help.

“Dr. Gosy’s patients are a major concern for us,” McCormack said. “There are a large number of patients who are not able to obtain their medications, and that puts many of them in a precarious position and likely means they’ll seek relief in emergency rooms.”

Opioids have their place, such as for acute pain from severe injuries such as broken bones and bad burns, McCormack said, but doctors must swing the medical pendulum significantly toward the use of non-narcotic alternatives for chronic pain.

“We have all come to realize the significant risk of these drugs. The potential for abuse is high,” he said.

The guidelines

The guidelines codify what emergency room personnel – including doctors, nurse practitioners and physician assistants – generally already do, McCormack said. But he and others see it as an important step in establishing clear, common protocols with limits that can assist the medical providers, inform patients about what to expect and prevent drug-seeking individuals from emergency room shopping.

“This is not a major change, but it sends the message to not have unrealistic expectations,” McCormack said.

UBMD physicians had been working on the guidelines in recent months but accelerated their release in the wake of the federal case against Gosy that alleges he provided opioid painkillers without a proper medical reason. Gosy pleaded not guilty but surrendered his license to prescribe controlled substances.

UBMD is the group that represents University at Buffalo-affiliated doctors at Kaleida Health hospitals, including Buffalo General Medical Center and Millard Fillmore Suburban in Amherst, as well as Erie County Medical Center, the Buffalo VA Medical Center and Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

The guidelines also received the blessing of the Erie County Health Department and Catholic Health hospital system, McCormack said.

Who shut Gosy’s office?

The exact circumstances of why Gosy’s practice closed remain unclear.

Defense attorney Joel L. Daniels said it is unfair for patients to blame his client for the sudden shutdown.

“They’re pointing the finger at the wrong person. Dr. Gosy wanted to keep the office open, but he didn’t have a chance,” he said.

Daniels said the government should have anticipated the potential for a crisis from the closing of the practice.

“They let these people twist in the wind,” Daniels said of federal prosecutors. “The government was well aware he had thousands of patients and that, if his practice had to close, there would be problems around the corner.”

He also said Gosy, who was charged with conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and unlawful distribution of narcotics, eventually will prove that he issued prescriptions for legitimate medical purposes.

Gosy, a neurologist, cared for 8,000 to 10,000 active patients, according Daniels. Many were prescribed narcotic painkillers, but others were being treated for such neurologic conditions as epilepsy.

Agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration were concerned about what would happen, said John Flickinger, resident agent in charge of the Buffalo DEA office.

“This is something we took into consideration during the course of our investigation. We know that there are probably a lot of patients of his practice who have legitimate needs for pain medication,” Flickinger said. “That is one reason why he is the only person charged in this case. “

Another full-time doctor and eight other people, physician assistants and nurse practitioners, still work at Gosy’s clinic and are available to assist patients and prescribe drugs, he said.

But with the practice shut down, his patients are looking elsewhere for painkillers, and many are showing up in emergency rooms.

“We feel bad,” McCormack of Kaleida said, referring to the predicament Gosy’s patients confront. “But we are dealing with a true epidemic. There is a major effort now to move away from managing pain with narcotics and for leaving the prescribing of opioids to the physicians with the most knowledge of the patient.”

Catholic Health system hospitals – including Mercy, Sisters and Kenmore Mercy – also have noticed an increase in patients coming from Gosy’s practice and will treat them like any other patient while applying protocols, Dr. Brian D’Arcy said.

“People are running out of medication. Many of them have legitimate pain and addiction issues,” said the senior vice president of medical affairs. “It’s a very big problem superimposed on an even larger drug problem.”

Patient advice

The website of Gosy & Associates states that the office will reopen May 16. In the meantime, public health officials have advised patients to seek care from their primary care physicians, a pain-management specialist or one of the area’s federal qualified health centers.

While that is sound advice, many primary care physicians are reluctant to prescribe narcotic painkillers.

Doctors shy away because of the increased government scrutiny. It’s also difficult to distinguish between patients with legitimate pain and those seeking drugs to feed an addiction.

To make matters worse, there is a limited number of pain-management specialists in the area, and many of those practices are full.

“I have a few more days before I run out of pills, and then I’m going to be in an ER in a fetal position from withdrawal symptoms,” said Patrick Mann, a former newspaper pressman who injured his back in 1998 when a forklift struck him.

His situation exemplifies the experiences of others. Over the years, Mann said he tried many non-narcotic medications and procedures to relieve his intense and chronic pain before being prescribed the brand name opioids Opana and Oxycontin in 2013.

“When I’m told off-handedly to just find another doctor, I want to scream. It’s not that easy. And when people suggest that this may be a good time to get off these drugs, it’s so callous. Withdrawal is horrible. You get so sick. It’s literally hell. And the pain that returns is all-consuming,” Mann said.

Mann said he has called seven pain-management physicians in the Buffalo area, and was told they were not taking new patients.

“I tried everything I could before going the opioid route. I take these drugs as prescribed. I play by all the rules about pill counts and urine tests. And now I’m being left to my own devices,” he said.

ER pain management

Management of pain in the emergency department is a challenge, particularly without an objective measure of pain amid a drug crisis revolving around painkillers.

Research shows that opioid prescribing began to decline in emergency rooms after 2010, following a decade long large increase that didn’t match the growth in visits for painful conditions.

Emergency medicine doctors prescribe a small share of all opioids prescribed in the United States, just 5 percent in 2012, according to a 2015 study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

But ER doctors have been among the high-frequency prescribers of opioids.

Of all the prescriptions they wrote in 2012, nearly 21 percent were for opioids, although most were low pill counts and immediate-release formulations.

News staff reporters Phil Fairbanks and Dan Herbeck contributed to this story. email: hdavis@buffnews.com

 

Medical Licensing Board….Protecting the public…. massaging their egos ?

Doctors of Courage

Dr. Mark Ibsen    http://doctorsofcourage.org/

This is an extremely long post. It records what happened over three years to Dr. Mark Ibsen of Helena, Montana. The main points to glean are the facts that State Medical Boards do not have patient needs as their priority. They are as much a part of government control as law enforcement, and are proponents of the government agenda against pain management doctors. Once you are tagged by your state medical board, your a__ is grass and they are the lawnmower.

The good points in this post is that there is actually good reporting of this case, with information in the doctor’s favor, instead of being all government hype and propaganda.  Good work, ladies and gentlemen. Here, reporters Terence Corrigan, Tom Kuglin, and Amanda Brandt from the Independent Record, have given us the best window into what happens to doctors being attacked by the government.

Terence Corrigan, author of “Physician’s license on the line: Patients say he’s the best” on Dec. 3, 2014, “Attorney questions doctor’s sanity in final day of hearing” on Dec. 4, 2014, and “How much is too much? Helena doctor’s drug prescriptions for pain challenged” on Dec. 8, 2014, covered Dr. Ibsen’s 4-day hearing.

Dr. Ibsen came under attack by the state medical board because of a complaint levied against him by a disgruntled clinic employee in 2013. The hearing took place in Dec., 2014. The major players during the board of medicine hearing covered in these articles were:

The hearing officer, David Scrimm.

The Board of Medical Examiners’ attorney, Mike Fanning, who is presenting the government’s side against the doctor

The doctor’s attorney, John Doubek.

The defendant’s evidence at the Board of Medical Examiners hearing was first forced to be reduced from 2,800 pages to 800 pages. However, through argument, Ibsen’s attorney got the full packet of documents admitted. However, this shows that these sessions are not really designed “for” the defendant. They want to minimize the defense. But they have no problem running hour after hour with government testimony.

The point of the hearing was to determine whether to impose sanctions on Ibsen and if so, what those sanctions should be. If Scrimm ruled that sanctions were needed, then a separate hearing panel would make the final decisions. The fact that a hearing was taking place at all means that the Board of Medicine planed on imposing sanctions. The hearing is just a way of white-washing the plan.

The complaints against Ibsen were that he over-prescribed opiate pain medications, failed to completely and properly keep patient records, did not properly examine or counsel his patients or suggest to them alternative pain treatments, such as chiropractic, physical therapy or naturopathic care, that he failed to properly treat patients with complex medical issues and lastly, vague allegations that he was mentally unstable.

Whether Ibsen was using proper procedures in evaluating patients and prescribing appropriately was disputed by witnesses. The crux of the problem was in his charting, per St. Peter’s Hospital Director of Pharmacy, Starla Blank. Dr. Camden Kneeland, the board’s expert witness and medical director of a pain clinic in Kalispell, said that without what he considered proper charting he couldn’t offer an opinion on the adequacy of care Ibsen provides. “If it’s not in the records how can I know?” he asked. . Kneeland provided testimony about the risks of narcotics and “standards of care.”

Both Kneeland and Blank referred over and over to the need for a pain management plan—a written agreement signed by the patient and the doctor. Blank described such a plan as critical for “responsible” use of opiates. But despite their increasing use such contracts are not legally required. Also, not everyone in the medical community thinks these agreements are useful and some even say they’re harmful to the doctor/patient relationship, akin to treating patients as suspects.

Kneeland reviewed the records of nine patients before the hearing and cited as problems, Ibsen’s failure to document safeguards of narcotic prescribing, failures to record patient exams and failure to refer (or to at least document referrals of) patients for other pain treatments besides narcotic painkillers. Kneeland also cited the absence of documentation in patient charts as methods used to try and prevent patients from getting too many painkillers. He also cited concerns that Ibsen’s patient records did not show whether Ibsen had done physical exams or taken patient histories.

Dr. Charles Anderson, a Helena neurologist who retired in 2012, testified on Ibsen’s behalf. In preparation for his testimony, he had reviewed the bulk of the patient records entered into evidence in the case. He also testified that he visited Ibsen’s clinic, spending a total of 50 hours or so reviewing the case.

When asked about Ibsen’s charting (patient records), Anderson said, “Most physicians tend to be independent minded.” Anderson described Ibsen’s charts as on the “lower half of the legibility scale.”  This shows that Dr. Ibsen did not use a computerized patient record, but did his charting longhand. This makes it harder to record all that transpires in an office visit. Just because it’s not there doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.

Anderson said that requiring signed controlled substances agreements was problematic. “Patients may lose their trust,” he said, “and there are bioethicists that agree. Patients must understand that you’re on their side.” Anderson said he did not use contracts in his four decades of practicing medicine, although he “saw some doctors that did.”

Anderson testified, in direct contradiction to other witnesses, that he saw clear evidence in Ibsens’ records that he had successfully weaned patients from narcotics. When asked about Anderson’s conclusions, Kneeland said, “My initial reaction was he couldn’t be reviewing the same things I was viewing.” The records were of the same patients.  This shows that government expert witnesses only report what the government wants them to report, in as negative a manner as possible. That’s what they get paid for, and their testimony in court should be scrutinized critically with the actual records. Kneeland testified that his success rate at weaning patients off opiates is 73 percent at reduced dosages and 10 percent off completely. No one testified in exact terms whether Ibsen was prescribing too many narcotic pain medications.

But when it came time for Ibsen’s patients, testifying on his behalf, to evaluate him the story was entirely different.

Ibsen’s first witness said “He really cared. He was beyond attentive. I’ve never met another doctor like him.” But on cross examination by Fanning, however, the patient got angry and at one point refused to answer questions when asked about his earlier testimony that he had been self-medicating.

“I can’t confirm or deny it,” he said. “You have an opinion of what I was doing but it’s all opinion. … What you’re trying to do is label me.”

It was reported that during the hearing when the government was examining one of Ibsen’s patients on the amount of pain medication Ibsen prescribed her, that Ibsen became visibly upset. Ibsen was moved to tears and became very angry at what he viewed as Fanning’s mistreatment of the patient.

Another patient testified for Ibsen that she’d been a patient for many years. She said Ibsen had conducted an extensive exam on her first visit and that he spent more time with her than any other doctor ever did. She also said Ibsen had taken a thorough history during every appointment and given her a physical exam pretty much every time she went in, describing Ibsen as “thorough” and “compassionate.” She also testified that he had referred her to many other treatment professionals, including a chiropractor, physical therapy and natural medicine, and had recommended she engage in swimming.

During testimony from Michael Ramirez, clinical coordinator of the Montana Professional Assistance Program, earlier issues with Ibsen’s behavior were discussed. According to Ramirez, Ibsen had a referral in 2006, and Ibsen was evaluated twice by two outside agencies. Ibsen complied with the program’s requirements, Ramirez said, and was released early. Ramirez did say, however, that Ibsen “was slow to comply” with the assistance program requirements. He was released from the program after about a year.

In the fourth and final day of the hearing, Fanning pushed Ibsen on allegations that Ibsen may have psychological problems that interfere with his ability to adequately perform his job. The tension between Ibsen and Fanning was immediately evident when Fanning began his questioning of Ibsen.

Shortly after Fanning started his line of questioning, hearing officer David Scrimm interrupted.

“I can see the tension,” he said. “I would ask that you (both) scale it back a little bit now before it gets any further down the road.”

“What kind of guidance would you give me?” Ibsen asked.

“Be cool,” Scrimm said.

Fanning’s line of questioning aimed at Ibsen’s behavior focused in large part on posts to Ibsen’s Facebook page. This shows how the government investigates every aspect of a doctor’s life to find something negative to use in court. Ibsen’s attorney, John Doubek, tried unsuccessfully several times to stop this line of questioning, objecting that it was irrelevant to the issues in the case. Fanning kept pressing Ibsen on his Facebook posts, asking what Ibsen’s intent was.

“Were you trying to threaten me?” Fanning asked. Fanning said. “He (Ibsen) has tried to undermine anybody who’s ever threatened him, and he sees me as a threat.”

Past actions with the Boards of Medicine are also brought up in these hearings, even if they are considered “No fault” decisions. Everything works against the doctor. In Dr. Ibsen’s case, in 2006, he entered into an agreement with the Montana Professional Assistance Program, a sort of diversion program, to avoid possible discipline through the more formal process with the state’s Board of Medical Examiners.

Ibsen signed a contract with the assistance program, but he said he was not happy with the terms. The 2006 issues, Ibsen said, were “driven by malice.” These kinds of programs are also driven by money. Spread the wealth, once a doctor is targeted. Ibsen went to the program because of his job as an emergency room physician due to pressure by the other doctors he worked with who thought he had a substance abuse problem. After a five-day evaluation at the Houston clinic, he was diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorder. Narcissistic personality disorder is a condition in which people have an excessive sense of self-importance, an extreme preoccupation with themselves and lack of empathy for others.

“I said, ‘Great, now let me go back to work with all the other narcissists,’” he said.

The five-day evaluation and diagnosis cost $10,000, Ibsen said, and the clinic’s recommendation was a 10-week in-patient treatment program that would cost $1,000 per day.

“I could hear ka-ching, ka-ching,” he said. “I thought the whole thing was driven by malice.”

Ibsen then got a second evaluation and complied with its treatment recommendations.

“I didn’t like it, but I wanted to keep my job. It turns out the job was gone anyway,” he said.

It took 6 months for the results of this hearing to finally be determined. Tom Kuglin wrote an article about it entitled “Examiner finds Ibsen met standards of patient care but kept insufficient records” on June 16, 2015. Usually the pro-doctor decisions aren’t reported by the press. This is a good article delineating the decisions that were in Dr. Ibsen’s favor. You would think, from the comments made here showing Dr. Ibsen was a good doctor, that that would be the end of the problem for him. But the government is unrelenting once they have you in their sights. You might win a battle, but they have the money to win the war.

The decision, a 49-page proposed order by David Scrimm, faces approval by the Montana Board of Medical Examiners, Scrimm found that Ibsen’s prescriptions were for legitimate medical reasons and that he employed and encouraged alternatives to medication for chronic pain.

The nearly 190 findings in Scrimm’s order include that Ibsen conducted regular assessments of his patients, and that he successfully reduced opioid use by nearly three-quarters of Christensen’s former patients, with 10 percent completely ceasing usage.

The findings go on to say that Ibsen often looked for alternatives to narcotics and that he took action against at least one patient that was “doctor shopping.”

Scrimm’s report surprisingly took issue with testimony from expert witnesses from the state, and what constituted “the” standard of care for chronic pain patients. “It was often not clear what was “a” standard of care versus “the” standard of care based on state provided testimony,” he wrote. The state further failed to prove that Ibsen suffered from any “psychological malady”. The allegations stem in part from interactions with Helena pharmacist Robert Gardipee, who refused to fill some of Ibsen’s prescriptions.  Ibsen was reportedly upset with Gardipee for interjecting in his treatment and,” did not hesitate to let Gardipee know that he thought Gardipee should fill the prescription as written,” Scrimm wrote. Scrimm found that Ibsen prescribed similar doses to Christensen’s former patients, and that without the narcotics their pain had returned.

Scrimm’s proposed order had to go back before another committee of the Board of Medical Examiners for a decision — a process that could take months. For failing to meet standards of care for record keeping, the order recommended that Ibsen’s medical license be placed on probation by the Board of Medical Examiners for 180 days. Ibsen would also need to complete a seminar on proper record keeping.

 “With the over prescriptions, Mark won on all those issues hands down,” said Ibsen’s attorney. “We think it’s a good order. We’re happy with it. The examiner spent a lot of time putting it together and we’re prepared to live with it. This is the recommendation by the guy appointed to hear the case, and in my experience, his word is it,” he said.

Fanning said “It is only a proposed decision so the board will decide how this will be concluded,” he said. “There are certain aspects of it that bear further study.”

An additional investigation ensued for a total of 30 or more patients after Ibsen treated a series of former patients of Bitterroot Valley Dr. Chris Christensen, who was raided by federal agents in April 2014 and had his license suspended relating to his prescribing of narcotics. Ibsen was reportedly told by a federal agent that he was “risking (his) freedom” by prescribing to those patients. When asked how he could treat the patients, the agent reportedly replied, “I can’t tell you. We’re not doctors.”

Ibsen subsequently reported to the federal agents when he found two of his patients had altered prescriptions to acquire more medication, Scrimm wrote.

But the damage had been done. Three months later this article by Perry Backus, “After Florence doctor’s arrest, Helena’s Ibsen drops chronic pain patients” appears on Sept 5, 2015.

In it, Mr. Backus states, “Dr. Mark Ibsen of Helena has been an outspoken advocate for providing chronic pain patients with the medications, including opiates, they need to carry on with their lives. Last week, in a short note, Ibsen told his patients he would no longer be able to do that. Ibsen’s decision follows the Ravalli County indictment of Dr. Chris Christensen of Florence on 400 felonies, including two counts of negligent homicide. Ibsen’s note read:

“To our patients: In solidarity with Dr. Christianson (sic), and in acknowledging the extreme hostility of the regulatory environment in which we are operating, Dr. Ibsen will no longer be prescribing any pain medications to chronic pain patients. Dr. Ibsen will be taking some time off to plan the next safe course of action. We wish you all the best.”

Ibsen’s announcement set off a panic for the hundreds of people who depend on him to treat their chronic pain, One of his patients suffering from fibromyalgia had been so impressed with Ibsen that she began volunteering at his Helena clinic to help other chronic pain patients fill out forms and find alternative resources. Now many of those patients are now contacting her, looking for answers that she can’t give.

“I get messages all day,” she said. “People are saying to me: ‘What am I going to do? No doctor will treat me. I’ve called all over.’ ” “They really don’t have any choices. They don’t have a doctor they can turn to. Every doctor that I called, especially after this Christensen thing, does not want to take anybody with a pain condition.”

She is quickly weaning herself off her medications while looking for alternative ways to treat her chronic pain.

“Withdrawal is not fun,” she said. Before she received treatment from Ibsen, her days were often spent curled up on her bed or her couch, crying out in pain, she said. “Right now, I’m afraid of going back to my couch,”

Ibsen said last week that his decision to stop prescribing pain medications to his patients with chronic pain was heartbreaking.

“I tried to figure out a way to cut down on the volume of chronic patients that I treat,” he said. “How do you make the decision on who gets thrown off the island?”

His decision had been a long time coming. Ibsen is certain that he’s still being investigated by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. After hearing about the charges against Christensen and reading a story from Florida where authorities are seeking the death penalty against a physician in a similar case, Ibsen said it was “too dangerous” for him to continue in this regulatory climate.

“That was pretty much it for me,” he said. “These guys are not going to stop.” He recently learned of a new complaint filed against him with the Board of Medical Examiners. He said the stress has finally taken its toll.

 “I’ve done my best for my patients and I wish them well,” he said. “I’m on some kind of path and I’m not sure where it’s going to take me.”

The newspaper reporter continues with helpful information in this “War Against Doctors”.

Pain-patient advocate Terri Anderson of Hamilton said it’s time for chronic pain patients and their families to step forward and let regulators know about this growing health-care crisis. “Only then will we get their attention.”

“Pain patients are committing suicide,” Anderson said. Forty percent of all suicides in Montana are directly related to chronic pain and illness.

Anderson suffers from adhesive arachnoiditis caused by a failed medical procedure that misplaced steroids in her spine. She lost her civil engineering career with the U.S. Forest Service because of it. She will rely on opiates for the rest of her life.

“Spinal injections expose patients to many risks for temporary benefits,” Anderson said. “Patients are bullied, shamed, dismissed and abandoned if they do not submit to profitable procedures in Montana pain clinics.”

The inability of chronic pain patients to obtain medications will drive some to look to the black market,

“There will be a rise in the number of people using heroin and other street drugs,” said Ibsen’s patient helper. “This is a health-care crisis. Everyone is afraid. There’s only so much pain a person can endure before they give in. That’s just the reality of our lives. When you can’t eat, can’t get out of bed and you just lay there in a ball crying all day and all night, there’s only so much you can take.”

“If a doctor can give you a medication that allows you to work and be a productive member of your community and take care of your family, why would you take that away?” she said. “This is really inhumane. We’re backed into a corner without any treatment options. It’s just not right.”

 

And then the finally coup de gras to Dr. Ibsen’s traumatic fight: the examiner’s order was rejected by the state medical board and they asked the state attorneys to recommend sanctions for not meeting standards of care in his record-keeping. 

“I thought we won in June,” Ibsen said. “I’m completely stunned and mystified.”

An article by Angela Brandt on Nov. 19, 2015 goes into more detail.

The board voted unanimously to reject the order after voicing concern with the testimony of a witness deemed an expert in pain management and questioning the legality of some of the findings. The two physician members of the Board of Medical Examiners said they would like to suspend Ibsen’s medical license in the meantime. His license could have been suspended when this investigation began. However, in spite of the hostile intentions of the State Medical Board, a state judge intervened in the suspension of Dr. Ibsen’s medical license in March, 2016. The board had voted to strip Ibsen of his license indefinitely. Two days later, District Judge James Reynolds issued a temporary restraining order and injunction against the Montana State Board of Medical Examiners.

But there is only so much a doctor can take through this process. This had been ongoing for three years. The government knows that time is on their side. Finally, April, 2016 marks the last day of operation for Urgent Care Plus, Dr. Ibsen’s clinic. He can no longer sustain the business, saying it has been rendered worthless,

Ibsen says the more than two years of hearings followed by the arduous waiting for word from the Board of Medical Examiners regarding allegations of improper recordkeeping have rendered him emotionally and financially exhausted. His current practice cannot be revived, he said.

“This is a ghost town here,” Ibsen said, gazing around one of his patient rooms. 

When at full staff, Urgent Care Plus had upwards of 18 employees, he said. The clinic ran for about six years, averaging about 11,000 patients annually. 

As for Ibsen, he’s not sure what his next step will be.

“I’ve been anxious. I’ve been not able to make it through a whole day,” he said. “I have to get this stuff cleared up before I can go anywhere.”

And so, the government wins another attack on a good doctor following the Hippocratic Oath. But at least it would appear that in some states there are reporters that are telling all of the facts, not just the government propaganda. The reporting for Dr. Ibsen was a breath of fresh air.