This Mother’s concern for an addicted child is UNDER WHELMING

Pain clinic doctor practiced for years after first death complaint

http://www.tampabay.com/news/courts/criminal/pain-clinic-doctor-practiced-for-years-after-first-death-complaint/2213638

TAMPA — Dana Kittler turned to the Florida Board of Medicine after her 26-year-old son overdosed on painkillers in 2009. She blamed a Pinellas Park doctor who, according to state records, had prescribed him 3,360 oxycodone pills in the year before his death.
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But Dr. Edward Neil Feldman’s patients kept dying of overdoses and a grieving mother found no peace.

“They didn’t do anything about Dr. Feldman,” said Kittler, a pharmacy technician now living in Tennessee. “Not at all.”

Three times in the past three years, a Board of Medicine panel has accused Feldman of malpractice, charging that he prescribed excessive, unjustified quantities of oxycodone and other medicines to patients he didn’t adequately screen, examine, treat, or drug counsel.

He still has his state medical license. He still has a federal Drug Enforcement Agency license to prescribe controlled substances.

He could still be on the job, except for a federal judge’s temporary order to stay home and steer clear of doctoring while awaiting trial in an alleged $6 million drug conspiracy.

One of his attorneys, Warren Pearson of Tallahassee, said he has seen no evidence that Feldman directly caused the death of Kittler’s son.

Libor Mark Kittler of Seminole died March 6, 2009, when Feldman was 69. The mother filed a complaint Dec. 6, 2010, when Feldman was 71. This year, the doctor turns 76, and the complaint continues to grow old.

Department of Health spokesman Ryan Ash said the agency is preparing to forward the complaint and two others to the state Division of Administrative Hearings for a final hearing.

Feldman signed a settlement agreement in two state cases, including Kittler’s, in April, neither admitting nor denying guilt, but accepting a $40,000 fine and agreeing to sanctions, including enrollment in a drug prescribing course at the University of Florida.

However, as the full Board of Medicine was set to vote on the agreement, Pearson withdrew it.

“It’s in negotiations,” Pearson said. “We’re having a back and forth with the Department of Health regarding his case.”

In the meantime, records reviewed by the Tampa Bay Times show that at least 16 other people in possession of Feldman prescriptions have died of overdoses since the death of Kittler, who came to the United States from the Czech Republic with his family as a boy.

Three deaths from 2010 and 2011 landed in a Dec. 10 federal grand jury indictment, unsealed last week, that accuses Feldman of dispensing drugs outside the usual course of professional practice for reasons that weren’t medically legitimate.

He and his wife both face charges of drug conspiracy and money laundering, but the doctor could spend the rest of his life in prison if he is found to have caused the deaths of patients identified only by the initials “J.M,” “R.G.” and “S.W.”

Under a 2014 Supreme Court ruling that arose from a heroin dealer’s appeal, Burrage vs. United States, the government would have to prove that without the Feldman-prescribed drugs, the deaths would not have occurred.

It’s sometimes a steep threshold because abusers might combine different drugs from multiple sources, tainting toxicology studies. For many of Feldman’s patients, the cause of death was “multidrug toxicity.”

Prosecutors can make a case that a drug cocktail caused a death, but only if dangerous elements of the cocktail were all dispensed by the same doctor.

In the case of Kittler, the Pinellas-Pasco medical examiner found methadone, oxycodone and Xanax. Public records in the case do not explain the source of the methadone.

Health officials allege in an administrative complaint that Feldman prescribed oxycodone and Xanax unnecessarily even as he recommended that Kittler enter an in-patient drug rehabilitation program.

His mother knew he abused drugs but assumed they came from the street, not doctors, she said. She could tell when he was high. She would kick him out of the house to keep him from being around his young nephew.

It stunned her, after the death, to see how much oxycodone her son had been prescribed, she said. She knows now he was doctor shopping. She opened the bills later. But she saw a list of a half a year’s worth of pills, she said, and many were from Feldman.

“His prescription, I gave that prescription to police, those detectives that came to my house,” she said. “That prescription was written for oxycodone, 30 milligrams, 240 pills. Can you picture that?”

Amid federal charges in the other cases, the DEA asked Feldman to relinquish his license. He has not yet done so, DEA spokeswoman Mia Rowe said this week.

The agency is aware that Magistrate Judge Anthony Porcelli made abstention from medicine a condition of Feldman’s pretrial release. He was released on an unsecured bond, in part because the government had tied up the family’s real property by announcing it might be forfeited.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office, which filed charges based on a DEA investigation, seeks forfeiture of the couple’s Ballast Point home and a clinic on Park Boulevard.

Feldman, at various times, had offices in Tampa, St. Petersburg and Pinellas Park.

Kittler’s mother recalls the sea of emotions that nearly propelled her to visit a clinic and confront the doctor in person.

“Once, I called and I was pretty cold and mean and nasty,” she said. “But I didn’t get to talk to the doctor. They didn’t put him on the phone.

“I was asking if they know the doctor was prescribing oxycodone and other narcotics to young kids like my son. I told them my son died because of Dr. Feldman.”

He is not criminally charged in Kittler’s death. He faces possible licensing sanctions.

The Board of Medicine, whose members are appointed by Gov. Rick Scott, operates under the Department of Health, which regulates and licenses health professions.

In disciplinary actions, the department acts as prosecutor and the board serves as an independent, quasijudicial arbiter, deciding if a professional has violated the law and determining punishment.

Asked if Department of Health cases normally take this long, Feldman’s attorney declined to answer.

“I’m not going to criticize the department, as a former employee and somebody opposite them in the current case,” Pearson said.

Radha V. Bachman, a health care lawyer for the firm Carlton Fields Jorden Burt isn’t involved in Feldman’s cases.

Speaking generally, she said delays sometimes work in favor of doctors who are in the wrong, allowing them to continue to practice.

Bachman speculated that the Department of Health might be allowing federal authorities to take the lead, yielding to agencies with greater investigative powers and resources.

“Whatever happens with regard to that case could put his license in jeopardy, baseline, aside from the fact that there’s a complaint.”

Times news researcher John Martin and staff writers Jimmy Geurts and Michael Auslen contributed to this report.

CVS Health willfully violated the federal law against such age discrimination

Jury awards Pell City man $1M in discrimination suit

http://www.annistonstar.com/news/article_d58128ae-b955-11e4-860b-afeef4fb6ca8.html#.VOfdvgqGJjZ.facebook

A federal jury in Anniston on Thursday awarded more than $1 million in damages to a pharmacist who claimed he was fired from a Pell City CVS because of his age.

The Birmingham-based law firm representing the pharmacist, James King, filed a complaint in 2012. He was 65 then. The complaint said King was suspended and then fired about a month after he reported the district supervisor for making disparaging comments about his age.

The jury found in King’s favor, and also ruled CVS Health wilfully violated the federal law against such discrimination.

Mike DeAngelis, a spokesperson for the Rhode Island-based company, said in a an email CVS Health disagrees with the verdict, citing firm non-discrimination policies in place.

“We are considering all of our legal options,” the statement read.

King was one of two pharmacists over the age of 60 fired in the same district. The other, Roger Harris, also filed suit and won $400,000 in damages from the company in 2013.

Employer loses against firing employee involved in union activity

 

Labor Board Judge Orders Hospital to Bargain with RNs,

Reinstate Nurse Fired for Union Activity, Stop RN Harassment

http://www.wcblegal.com/contact-us

Is refusing to dispense the right dose the same as dispensing the wrong dose ?

http://www.legalmatch.com/law-library/article/pharmacist-malpractice-lawyers.html

Can I Sue My Pharmacist for Malpractice?

Pharmacists, like other skilled professionals, have a duty to exercise a certain level of care to prevent injuries to their patients. Pharmacists may be sued for malpractice if they caused an injury by falling below this level of care.

What Legal Responsibilities Does My Pharmacist Have?

A pharmacist has specialized training and holds himself or herself out to the general public to be able and qualified to fill prescriptions without error. They are expected to act in a manner consistent with a reasonable person with similar education and training.

A pharmacist must use his or her judgment concerning refills, drug interactions, and the patient’s personal use of a drug. He or she should also have general knowledge about a drug and why the patient’s doctor has prescribed it.

There are several ways in which a pharmacist may be liable for malpractice:

  • Dispensing the wrong dose of the drug
  • Dispensing the wrong drug entirely
  • Overlooking a potential drug interaction
  • Failing to exercise proper judgment regarding dosage or duration
  • Failing to counsel the patient on side effects and drug interactions

How Can I Bring a Lawsuit?

When a pharmacist breaches the standard of care to which they are held, and this breach causes injury, they have committed negligence. Generally, the patient need only show that the wrong drug or dose was dispensed and that the patient was injured as a consequence. However, pharmacists are gaining more professional responsibilities to their patients as they become more involved in the care of patients and are thus susceptible to committing malpractice in many other ways. Liability may also extend to the hospital or facility that employs the pharmacist.

Do I Need an Attorney?

In order to sue a pharmacist for malpractice, you must have been injured by his or her mistake or poor judgment. An attorney that practices pharmacist malpractice can help you evaluate the strength of your case.

Consult a Lawyer – Present Your Case Now!
Last Modified: 12-16-2013 04:21 PM PST

 

Five times national Heroin use and they are worried about Fentanyl ?

mtmolehill1DEA on Fentanyl

http://www.koat.com/news/dea-on-fentanyl/31407846

FEDERAL AGENTS ARE LOOKING FOR A DEADLY DRUG, THAT’S KILLED HUNDREDS AND IS NOW MAKING A COMEBACK. AGENTS ARE WORRIED IT’S GOING TO SOON SHOW UP IN NEW MEXICO. ACTION 7 NEWS REPORTER MEGAN CRUZ EXPLAINS WHY IT’S SO DANGEROUS. ROYALE, FENTANYL IS A PRESCRIPTION DRUG – A VERY POWERFUL PAINKILLER. ON THE BLACK MARKET, IT’S COMMONLY MIXED WITH OR SUBSTITUTED FOR HEROIN. THE U.S. DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION SAYS FENTANYL DEATHS ARE INCREASING SO MUCH RIGHT NOW… THEY’RE ISSUING A NATIONWIDE PUBLIC SAFETY ALERT. NEW MEXICO HAS A HUGE HEROIN PROBLEM. Up to 5 times the national average for overdose deaths. THAT’S WHY A SPIKE IN FENTANYL DEATHS, HAS FEDERAL AGENTS HERE CONCERNED. THE DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION SAYS FENTANYL HAS SIMILAR AFFECT AS HEROIN, SO THE TWO ARE OFTEN MIXED TOGETHER, OR FENTANYL IS PASSED OFF AS HEROIN. PROBLEM IS, FENTANYL IS UP TO FIFTY TIMES MORE POTENT THAN HEROIN. It’s such a small amount that is potentially lethal. ASSISTANT SPECIAL AGENT IN CHARGE SEAN WAITE SAYS… A SUGAR PACKET CAN GIVE YOU SOME PERSPECTIVE. HE SAYS A COUPLE SUGAR GRAINS WORTH OF FENTANYL, COULD KILL YOU. IN PENNSYLVANIA ALONE, OFFICIALS REPORTED 200 FENTANYL-RELATED DEATHS IN 2014. IN NEW JERSEY, MORE THAN 80. WAITE SAYS OUR NEW MEXICO STREETS APPEAR FREE OF FENTANYL FOR NOW, BUT … We’re keeping a watchful eye over the situation. THE LAST TIME FENTANYL WAS A PROBLEM WAS FROM 2005 TO 2007. OFFICIALS SAY DURING THAT TIME, THERE WERE MORE THAN A THOUSAND FENTANYL-RELATED DEATHS ACROSS THE U.S. WOW, SO NOT TAKING A CHANCE THIS TIME AROUND

The DEA is so successful in New Mexico in preventing access to the ILLEGAL DRUG Heroin … that it has ONLY FIVE TIMES rate as the national average. I guess that future job security for the DEA in New Mexico is pretty secure …

Rite Aid Pharmacist STABBED during robbery

Rxtothehead

Pharmacist stabbed during robbery

http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2015/feb/21/pharmacist-rite-aid-drugs-robbery-escondido/

— A drug store robber stabbed a pharmacist in the shoulder before escaping with prescription drugs Saturday night, Escondido police said.

The holdup occurred about 6:30 p.m. at Rite Aid on South Centre City Parkway at Felicita Avenue, police Lt. Ed Varso said.

A man possibly in his 20s, covered in a hooded sweatshirt and a red-and-gray flannel jacket, went to the pharmacy counter at the back of the store and demanded drugs, Varso said.

The pharmacist handed over some number of medications, but got stabbed in one shoulder by the robber. “There was no real reason,” Varso said.

The robber, who was light-skinned, about 5 feet 8 inches tall and muscular, escaped out a back door. Medics took the wounded man to the hospital.

1-ribbonFirst they came for the mentally ill addicts, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a mentally ill addict.

Then they came for the empathetic prescribers, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not an empathetic prescriber.

Then they came for the Pharmacists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Pharmacist.

Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me

Remove Judge Kathleen M. McCarthy

judge-kathleen-mccarthy-family

Remove Judge Kathleen M. McCarthy

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Remove-Judge-Kathleen-M-McCarthy/823203351083628

Judge ‘Outraged’ at Innocent Man, Orders Him to Pay $30,000 in Support for Child That Isn’t His

Carnell Alexander is not the father of the now-adult child for whom several courts, including the Wayne County Circuit Court this week, have ordered him to pay $30,000 in back child support for. How do we know he’s not the father? Because he took a DNA test proving the contrary, and even the mother (an ex-girlfriend) now says he’s not.

How is it possible in the Land of the Free that men can face huge fines, revocation of professional licenses, forfeiture of the right to international travel, and sometimes (as in Alexander’s case until this week) even jail time, from owing child support to kids that aren’t theirs? I wrote a feature about that 11 years ago, entitled “Injustice by Default.” Short version:

Governments (and sometimes even hospitals) are financially incentivized to attach paternity to the children of single mothers, particularly those seeking welfare benefits. Departments of Child Support Services will sometimes go on information as flimsy as “Dude with this name living in Southern California”; if a records search turns up only one dude, he will likely be mailed a court summons. That court summons will often be very confusingly written, so that the men don’t realize that they are just 30 days away from being declared the father via default judgment. Once you have been named the father, you owe all back child support (sometimes with interest), said support will be garnished from your wages, and it is devilishly hard to get your paternity undeclared, even with DNA proof and sworn affidavits from the mother.

Next generation of abuser/addicts ?

Hospitals See Alarming Increase in Suicidal Children

No easy solutions for pediatric mental health.

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Pediatrics/PreventiveCare/50117?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2015-02-21&utm_content=&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=DailyHeadlines&utm_source=ST&eun=g578717d0r&

Here’s a troubling thought: more kids and young adults are intentionally hurting themselves — sometimes lethally.

“The biggest news here is that there is a startling jump in the number of kids hospitalized for suicide and self injury between 2006 and 2011,” said Celeste Torio, PhD, MPH, scientific review officer, Office of Extramural Research Education and Priority Populations (OEREP) at the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).

The data on self-injury and suicide come from a report, published in American Pediatrics that found inpatient visits for suicide, suicidal ideation, and self-injury rose by 104% from 29,000 in 2006 to just below 59,000 in 2011, while “all-cause” children’s hospitalizations have not increased.

Everyone knows that the DEA doesn’t call ahead and demand money

Only On 2: Local Woman Gets Threatening Call From DEA But It’s All A Scam