Pharmacists in Florida must complete 2 extra hours of training

Pharmacists in Florida must complete 2 extra hours of training

Rule change is in response to pain pill epidemic in Florida, officials say

http://www.wesh.com/news/pharmacists-in-florida-must-complete-2-extra-hours-of-training/36881172

 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. —The Florida Board of Pharmacy has approved a new rule that requires pharmacists to complete two extra hours of training regarding prescription pain medication.

Officials say it’s the first step to help pharmacists deal with patients who require pain medication.

The rule change begins to outline what pharmacists can do when handling patients who are prescribed pain medication.

Pharmacists will have access to a database that will ensure that the patient is seeking to obtain the drug legally.

The new rule goes into effect on Dec. 24.

Justice for all… just have to write a CHECK ?

 Patient Harm: When An Attorney Won’t Take Your Case

Ernie Ciccotelli was trying to do a good deed when he donated a kidney to his brother. But within days of the surgery, his incision was oozing green fluid and his guts were rotting.

Ciccotelli said he was almost killed by an infection, and the follow-up surgeries and months of disability nearly ruined his fledgling legal practice. So he looked for a malpractice attorney who would help him file a case against the hospital.

That’s when he ran into a problem faced by many who are harmed in a medical setting: Attorneys refuse their cases, not because the harm didn’t happen but because the potential economic damages are too low.

It’s estimated that hundreds of thousands of patients a year suffer some type of preventable injury or die while undergoing medical care. For many of these patients or surviving family, a lawsuit is the only hope to recover losses, learn the truth about what happened and ensure the problem is corrected.

But lawyers may have to invest $50,000 or more to pursue a case, and they usually only get paid if they win or settle. The payout is determined largely by economic damages – lost earnings, medical bills and future costs caused by the injury.  Those who don’t earn big paychecks – including children, the elderly and stay-at-home-moms – are the least likely to find an attorney, studies show.

A 2013 Emory University School of Law study found that 95 percent of patients who seek an attorney for harm suffered during medical treatment will be shut out of the legal system, primarily for economic reasons. Most attorneys would not accept a case – even one they might win – if the damages likely were less than $250,000.

“You’re basically saying for someone who doesn’t earn a lot of money, ‘It’s OK for a hospital to harm them,’” Ciccotelli said.

Ciccotelli’s experience is not uncommon. ProPublica has heard from hundreds of patients through its Patient Harm Facebook group and Patient Harm Questionnaire. The inability to find a lawyer is a common refrain.

For many cases, “the juice isn’t worth the squeeze,” said Stephen Daniels, a research professor at the American Bar Foundation, a legal research institute.

The elderly are probably affected the most, Daniels said, even when they’ve suffered an obvious medical error that led to permanent disability or death. Elderly patients are often retired, so their income is low. Plus, they usually have no dependents and Medicare picks up their medical bills.

By comparison, a 40-year-old who suffered the same type of harm but was a breadwinner for a family with three children, would be a much more attractive case, Daniels said.

Lawyers are the gatekeepers to the law,” Daniels said. “You can have all the rights in the world, but if no one will take your case, then those rights mean absolutely nothing.”

Marshall Allen, Olga Pierce, Ocupop

Ciccotelli, 58, donated his kidney in 2006 at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. The transplant went off without a hitch, but his medical records show that within days he suffered nausea and intense pain in his gut, then chills and a steady greenish drainage that soaked his bandages and shirts.

He had an infection plus an additional complication: His intestines had knuckled under beneath his skin. Ten days after the transplant, doctors operated again, removing 15 inches of dying intestine from Ciccotelli’s gut and scraping out the infection. The hospital, which declined to comment for this story, didn’t charge him for the clean-up procedures.

The injury Ciccotelli sustained while being a Good Samaritan had a cascading effect on his life and finances. He had just started a new career as a lawyer, running a jack-of-all-trades shop near his home in Norwich, Vt. But because he couldn’t consistently travel to his office and hearings, he estimates he lost $45,000 in earnings.

Ciccotelli said he paid a few thousand dollars out-of-pocket traveling back and forth to the hospital for treatments. For about a year he was unable to carry any weight, and he said he still can’t exercise the way he did before the surgery, which has caused his weight to balloon.

Ciccotelli figured another lawyer would jump to take his case. He’d been fine before the surgery and clearly had suffered harm. But one by one, lawyers turned him away.

After about a half-dozen rejections, he asked one why no one would take his case. You can win, the attorney told him, but it won’t be enough money to be worth it.

As a new lawyer, Ciccotelli didn’t make much. He estimated his income would be about $41,000 that year. Because the hospital performed the repair surgeries for free, there were no big medical bills, the attorney told him. Plus, he’d be able to earn income again.

Given the potentially high costs of suing a hospital, the attorneys took a pass.

In some states, the problem is exacerbated by strict caps on damages for medical malpractice. A 2011 study in the journal Qualitative Sociology however, found that the emphasis on damages affects patients nationwide, no matter the state limits.

The study included interviews with attorneys and found that monetary damages were the most important factor in taking cases. “I turn down clearly meritorious cases all the time because I think they’re just not worth enough money,” said an attorney from Pennsylvania, which the study said did not have caps on damages.

More than 450 attorneys were surveyed for the Emory study, “Uncovering the Silent Victims of the American Medical Liability System,” which found that three out of four medical malpractice attorneys reject more than 90 percent of the cases they screen. The study found:

The study recommended reforming the system by increasing funding for legal services, so attorneys could be compensated for their time; making defendants who lose a case pay the plaintiff’s attorney fees; or sending malpractice complaints to an administrative system with neutral adjudicators and medical experts so patients wouldn’t need an attorney.

Malpractice attorneys agree that many legitimate cases aren’t pursued, though not because they’re greedy or don’t want to help.

Patrick Malone, a Washington, D.C., attorney who has represented patients in medical malpractice lawsuits since 1985, said he triages cases to focus on those that resulted in permanent harm. That’s necessary, he said, because of the time and emotional investment the patient will need to make to bring the case to trial, and because of his investment in the case.

Most cases settle, Malone said, but not usually until the last minute, years into the process. So he has to prepare the patient and himself for a long haul.

Some patients are initially outraged when he declines to take their case, but Malone said it can cost up to $20,000 just to assess a case and up to $300,000 in expenses to bring a complex case to trial. If there’s a verdict or settlement in the patient’s favor, the attorney fees eat up a third and expenses take up more.

If you spend $50,000 and only get $50,000, the lawyer gets nothing and the patient gets nothing,” he said. “Nobody wants to do that.”

Some call patients who can’t access legal system “hidden victims,” said the American Bar Foundation’s Daniels. No one knows how many there are because their cases never get a hearing.

Not all patients who suffer harm have the same experience. A small but growing movement in the medical community encourages openness with patients when they’ve suffered harm.

Doctors and hospital officials who subscribe to this philosophy, such as those at the University of Michigan Health System, the University of Illinois at Chicago Medical Center and Stanford University Medical Center say they tell patients when something went wrong and offer an apology and sometimes even compensation. They say the method is more humane and often eliminates lawsuits.

ProPublica is conducting an ongoing investigation of health care safety. Have you been harmed while undergoing medical care? Please complete our Patient Harm Questionnaire

It’s a ‘shell game’ according to a national prescription price expert

http://www.kare11.com/story/news/investigations/2015/11/18/prescription-drugs-costs-insurance/76023322/

A federal class action lawsuit accuses CVS Health of “fraud” and of “knowingly and intentionally” overcharging people in insurance plans by using “a false and deceptive pricing scheme” to inflate the prices of prescription drugs.

We asked CVS for an interview. Instead, CVS sent a written statement saying, in part, the company will “vigorously defend against the baseless allegations in this lawsuit, which is completely without merit.”

The CVS statement didn’t explain why its price for Burshem’s medicine was so much higher than the other pharmacies we checked.

Not only was the total cost for Burshem’s medicine higher at CVS. So was his copay.

His bill from CVS Caremark shows even with insurance covering most of the total cost, Burshem’s copay was $476.55.

That’s almost double the price – without insurance – at the local pharmacy Burshem found.The full price there was just $259.02.

more cash and property transferred hands via civil asset forfeiture than via burglary

Law enforcement took more stuff from people than burglars did last year

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/11/23/cops-took-more-stuff-from-people-than-burglars-did-last-year/

Here’s an interesting factoid about contemporary policing: In 2014, for the first time ever, law enforcement officers took more property from American citizens than burglars did. Martin Armstrong pointed this out at his blog, Armstrong Economics, last week.

Officers can take cash and property from people without convicting or even charging them with a crime — yes, really! — through the highly controversial practice known as civil asset forfeiture. Last year, according to the Institute for Justice, the Treasury and Justice departments deposited more than $5 billion into their respective asset forfeiture funds. That same year, the FBI reports that burglary losses topped out at $3.5 billion.

Armstrong claims that “the police are now taking more assets than the criminals,” but this isn’t exactly right: The FBI also tracks property losses from larceny and theft, in addition to plain ol’ burglary. If you add up all the property stolen in 2014, from burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft and other means, you arrive at roughly $12.3 billion, according to the FBI. That’s more than double the federal asset forfeiture haul.

[In tough times, police start seizing a lot more stuff]

One other point: Those asset forfeiture deposit amounts are not necessarily the best indicator of a rise in the use of forfeiture. “In a given year, one or two high-dollar cases may produce unusually large amounts of money — with a portion going back to victims — thereby telling a noisy story of year-to-year activity levels,” the Institute for Justice explains. A big chunk of that 2014 deposit, for instance, was the $1.7 billion Bernie Madoff judgment, most of which flowed back to the victims.

For that reason, the net assets of the funds are usually seen as a more stable indicator — those numbers show how much money is left over in the funds each year after the federal government takes care of various obligations, like payments to victims. Since this number can reflect monies taken over multiple calendar years, it’s less comparable to the annual burglary statistics.

Still, even this more stable indicator hit $4.5 billion in 2014, according to the Institute for Justice — higher again than the burglary losses that year.

One final caveat is that these are only the federal totals and don’t reflect how much property is seized by state and local police each year. Reliable data for all 50 states is unavailable, but the Institute of Justice found that the total asset forfeiture haul for 14 states topped $250 million in 2013. The grand 50-state total would probably be much higher.

Still, boil down all the numbers and caveats above and you arrive at a simple fact: In the United States, in 2014, more cash and property transferred hands via civil asset forfeiture than via burglary. The total value of asset forfeitures was more than one-third of the total value of property stolen by criminals in 2014. That represents something of a sea change in the way police do business — and it’s prompting plenty of scrutiny of the practice.

Give Pain A Voice

https://youtu.be/NI_aQRl3bYg

Give Pain A Voice

Give Pain A Voice

SECOND TIME IN FIVE MONTHS ???

Pictured from to left to right, Siera Pryer, James Dyer, Jasen Webb, Mia Bindon, bottom left, Charles Benjamin, Clifford Buckley, Jessee Armstead Jr. and Darrly Richards

Counterfeit prescription drug ring in Baton Rouge area results in multiple arrests

http://www.nola.com/crime/baton-rouge/index.ssf/2015/05/counterfeit_prescription_drug.html

Baton Rouge police and DEA make arrests on prescription drug fraud

http://theadvocate.com/news/police/14227831-123/baton-rouge-police-and-dea-make-arrests-on-prescription-drug-fraud

Officials arrested eight people, including seven Baton Rouge residents, accused of using fake prescriptions to obtain $45,000 worth of pain medication.

The Drug Enforcement Administration Diversion Squad, with the help of multiple local police agencies, rounded up the people wanted on warrants for allegedly buying and possessing narcotics they collected using prescriptions made to look as if they came from Baton Rouge medical facilities, an East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff’s Office news release says.

The group obtained about 810 dosage units of Hydrocodone and about 1,220 dosage units of Oxycodone in the last year, together estimated to have a street value of $45,000, the release says.

Authorities booked into East Baton Rouge Parish Prison Tuesday Mia Bindon, 36, 1314 N. 48th Street; Charles Benjamin, 46, 4260 Billops Street; Clifford Buckley, 55, 3436 Osceola Street and Darrly Richards, 51, 3324 Wenonah Street, all accused of obtaining a controlled dangerous substance and possession of a Schedule II drug. Bindon was booked on two counts and Richards on three.

Jesse Armstead Jr., 57, 1229 N. 37th Street, was also arrested Tuesday on one count of an attempt to obtain a controlled dangerous substance by fraud.

Officials also arrested in November Siera Pryer, 77655 Lee Street, Maringouin; James Dyer, 2829 Tecumseh; and Jasen Webb, 5145 Maple Dr., all on obtaining a controlled dangerous substance and possession of a Schedule II drug. Webb was booked on three counts.

Agencies involved in the round up include Iberville Sheriff’s Office, East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff’s Office, Louisiana State Police, West Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office, Ascension Parish Sheriff’s Office and Iberia Parish Sheriff’s Office.

More arrests are anticipated, the release says.

I guess that Joint Commission no longer considered “PAIN” the FIFTH VITAL SIGN ?

stevemailbox

A Nurse from  OHIO writes:
“As a nurse I have tried to make a stand. Patients aren’t in the ICU without cause. It is horrifying to watch a patient suffer on a ventilator because the pharmacy is watching everything. I chose to do the ethical thing and medicate. I stayed within the confines of the orders however because I medicate more than all the other nurses I’m being accused of diversion. I’ve proven twice by taking their test that I was not. Now I have to worry that they will accuse me of stealing and selling the drugs because I can’t give a dirty sample. It is a witch hunt. I hate what my profession has become and it disgusts me that more of us aren’t standing up. When I first became a nurse you had to give the patient all they wanted. That created this wave of junkies. The board of pharmacy is going to be responsible for the next wave but its going to be legitimate patients they are refusing to help now. I can tell you that if you are able to make big donations and build hospital wings you can get anything you want.”
 

A Nurse from  WI writes:
“A nurse for over 50 years, I have seen patients and friends suffer needlessly, and have experienced the denial of humane treatment myself. The current climate of over-control and witch hunts is very alarming.”

How the DEA invented “narco-terrorism”

Minnesota Marijuana Legalization Update

Minnesota Marijuana Legalization Update: Medical Pot Program Expands To Include Patients With Chronic Pain

http://www.ibtimes.com/minnesota-marijuana-legalization-update-medical-pot-program-expands-include-patients-2208401

Minnesota next summer will open its medical marijuana program to patients who experience chronic pain, state Department of Health Commissioner Ed Ehlinger said Wednesday, according to the Star Tribune. The decision could add thousands of patients to the state’s program, which has struggled with low enrollment and high prices since it was launched in July.

This change will make Minnesota the 19th state where people with intractable pain — pain that cannot otherwise be cured or treated — can legally use medical marijuana, the Associated Press reported. Of the states where medical marijuana is legal, just five do not include severe, chronic or intractable pain as a qualifying condition.

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Ehlinger said in a statement that it was a “tough choice,” according to the AP. However, he said, “given the strong medical focus of Minnesota’s medical cannabis program and the compelling testimony of hundreds of Minnesotans, it became clear that the right and compassionate choice was to add intractable pain to the program’s list of qualifying conditions.”

Marijuana Legality by State | FindTheHome

Minnesota’s medical marijuana program, which had 760 people enrolled as of Sunday, is one of the most restrictive in the country. To be accepted, patients need a doctor or other caregiver to certify they have one of nine serious health conditions, such as cancer, epilepsy, muscular dystrophy or Crohn’s disease, the Star Tribune reported. The state sells cannabis only in liquid or pill form, according to the Star Tribune, and it must be purchased at one of eight dispensaries owned by two approved companies — Leafline Labs and Minnesota Medical Solutions.

While pain patients make up the majority of medical marijuana users in other states, Minnesota residents were divided on the issue. In the leadup to the decision, many citizens lobbied the state’s health department to expand the program, while an eight-member panel of health experts recommended against it, citing concerns about drug abuse and a lack of evidence for the efficacy of treating pain through medical marijuana.

The expansion is set to take effect Aug. 1, 2016, if lawmakers do not make changes to it this spring. However, both the Republican-controlled House and the Democratic-Farmer-Labor-led Senate would have to vote against the addition for it to fail.

Another point of view about MT’s medical licensing board travesty

Dear Friends of Mark Ibsen,

 

I am truly saddened over the deplorable situations in Montana and Washington. Dr. Ibsen was a most caring, competent physician. If the government didn’t approve of his practice, they could have gotten him special training and supervision. We simply can’t take care of worthy, suffering patients only with interventionalists, rehabbers, and mental counselling. We need medical doctors like Dr. Ibsen. I have long advocated that we need a certification system for family physicians and internists who will do medical pain management. These physicians need to be known to government and all other concerned parties.   To decimate a good man and doctor like Dr. Ibsen is simply wrong. It’s also wrong for states like Montana and Washington to deprive ill, suffering intractable pain patients of treatment so they will die of cardiac-adrenal failure.   The wrongness is now forcing patients to come to California for humanitarian, competent help. Pain patients and their families should know that the problem of under-treatment could be resolved within months if willing doctors could be certified and trained to do medical pain management.   The rush to have “guidelines” is pretty much a farce and designed to protect the financial interests of certain physicians, hospitals, and other interests who don’t do chronic pain medical management.

With Deep Sympathies and Prayers for My Friend, Mark Ibsen,

Forest Tennant M.D., Dr. P.H.
Contact Information:

Forest Tennant M.D., Dr. P.H.
Veract Intractable Pain Clinic
338 S. Glendora Ave.
West Covina, CA 91790-3043
Clinic Ph: 626-919-0064
Clinic Fax: 626-919-0065
Office Ph: 626-919-7476
Office Fax: 626-919-7497

Websites:
www.foresttennant.com
www.hormonesandpaincare.com