DEA “TACKLES” the NFL

NFL DEA Investigation

DEA Agents Raid NFL Medical Staffs After Games

http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/ap-newsbreak-dea-agents-check-nfl-medical-staff-26955878

Federal drug enforcement agents showed up unannounced Sunday to check at least three visiting NFL teams’ medical staffs as part of an investigation into former players’ claims that teams mishandled prescription drugs.

“DEA agents are currently interviewing NFL team doctors in several locations as part of an ongoing investigation into potential violations of the (Controlled Substances Act),” Payne said.

The spot checks were done by investigators from the federal DEA. They did not target specific teams, but were done to measure whether visiting NFL clubs were generally in compliance with federal law. Agents requested documentation from visiting teams’ medical staffs for any controlled substances in their possession, and for proof that doctors could practice medicine in the home team’s state.

The nationwide probe is being directed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York — where the NFL is headquartered — but involves several U.S. attorney’s offices.

The lawsuit alleges the NFL and its teams, physicians and trainers acted without regard for players’ health, withholding information about injuries while at the same time handing out prescription painkillers such as Vicodin and Percocet, and anti-inflammatories such as Toradol, to mask pain and minimize lost playing time. The players contend some teams filled out prescriptions in players’ names without their knowledge or consent, then dispensed those drugs — according to one plaintiff’s lawyer — “like candy at Halloween,” along with combining them in “cocktails.”

At the time, these players didn’t want to get back in the game and play ? No matter the safety equipment… being tackled by a “refrigerator” isn’t going to have a high probability to cause some pain?  If the DEA gets their way… will the NFL have to play touch or flag football ?

 

Attorneys causing our healthcare system to become more dangerous ?

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What Ebola Failures Reveal About American Hospitals

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/cafe/what-ebola-failures-reveal-about-american-hospitals

From the article:

Because you asked

keepcalmThis was sent to me by a physician friend of mine.. I don’t know Dr. Edmiston, but know/trust the physician that sent it to me.

As always

YOU DO NOTHING YOU GET NOTHING

From Dr Dave Edmiston:

If you are disabled and unable to fill a prescription, please email me at dave@FarSighted.com if you would like to take it to the next level at no time or financial cost to you.

Rumor on the street … 11/15/2014

rumoronstreet Does anyone have any idea why 1-2 dozen CVS stores on the east coast are pulling a lot of their Rx inventory…pulling Rxs still in the waiting bin and refilling them and/or calling pts and asking them to come back to have their Rxs refilled/replaced ?  And all of this inventory is slated to be DESTROYED ?

A conference to instill fear and paranoia ?

stevemailboxMy HMO refuses to treat my rare disease Dercum’s Disease. They kept telling me it was only fibromyalgia, even though the lumps kept multiplying and were so painful that I was bedbound and barely cognizant of the day. I would wake to my own screams. I found my own diagnosis but had to fly to the only specialist to have it confirmed. When I had brought the possibility up to my HMO only the dermatologist believed me and she was told I was exaggerating and had fibromyalgia and just wanted pain meds. The specialist confirmed what I had feared and gave me a protocol of many treatments to try. Top of the list was pain meds. They still refused. I got treatments from her. HMO had me go for a second opinion. I did. Got confirmed. Still no treatment. I just paid out of pocket this past year for low dose methotrexate and we found that it took Fentanyl 75mcg every 48 hrs to subdue the pain. I have been taking that since last January. I stopped needing even any breakthrough meds so I stopped getting refills. NOW, my specialist has dropped all scripts for pain meds. No decreasing dose….She is terrified to treat me with any because of a conference she went to. She told me to start stretching out to three days last month, which I kept trying to do, but would be bedridden on the third and first day of the patch. Apparently, she forgot I didn’t have enough meds for breakthrough and since I didn’t comply the entire month, she is using that fact as the reason for breaking off. When she ordered me to do it again immediately, I reminded her that the last prescription I had for Percocet was from last year and I had only about 10 pills(which I had forgotten about.) I haven’t heard back but I suppose she won’t write me any more Percocet, either. I was suicidal, the pain was so bad before the pain meds. I wish I could enjoy these last two months but I need to find a compassionate pain doctor and I have tried so hard here in CA, but had no luck….

Does this sound like failing to meet the standard of care and best practices ?  I would like to see the brochure on that conference… and who the speakers were and the topics on the agenda ?

Patient safety is everything ?

From article:
the Florida State House of Representatives passed a bill in April 2013 that revised the pharmacy technician-to-pharmacist ratio from 3:1 to 6:1. In the Florida State Senate version of the bill, legislators considered increasing the ratio 6-fold without approval from the Florida Board of Pharmacy.
I wonder who was pushing this law? Could it have been NACDS ( The National Associations of Chain Pharmacies) ? Last time I looked, all the board members in Florida worked for corporate pharmacy.. maybe that is why the BOP didn’t bother getting involved ? Of course, the primary charge of the BOP is to protect the health and safety of the general public.
Just ask any Pharmacist how safe they think things will be if they have to supervise six technicians and at the volume that would be required for the chains to justify six technicians were on duty at one time.  IMO, this law has more to do with corporate profits… than patient safety… and corporate profits.. helps assure political election contributions

Theft by employees can cost millions ?

Myron Lesh, who with wife Cookie, purchased the pharmacy 32 years ago. The Clifton couple have operated it since.

Tough goodbye for owners of Ridgewood icon Harding Pharmacy and Liquor

http://www.northjersey.com/news/tough-goodbye-for-owners-of-ridgewood-icon-harding-pharmacy-and-liquor-1.1134739

From the article:

A lawsuit filed some years ago against the Leshes also hurt the business.

The couple settled the suit for millions in 2011 with the guardians of a then-17-year-old Saddle River man, who had overdosed at a party on drugs that had been stolen by a former employee.

I wonder if the same thing would have happened if the employee had stolen liquor and a person was killed in car crash from DUI or alcohol overdose ?

Feel free to use !

lettertoeditor  Word format

lettertoeditor PDF format

https://www.facebook.com/markmusheribsen?fref=ts

https://www.facebook.com/groups/supportibsen/

I wrote this letter and sent it to the local paper in support of Dr. Mark Ibsen.  It would seem that the local prosecutor took exception to the number of chronic pain pts that Dr. Ibsen was treating..  And called the DEA.. Apparently another local doctor was “defrocked”. Many of these pts were on high doses of opiates for their chronic pain.  Apparently those in law enforcement that ended up “defrocking” this one doctor could care less about those pts .. if they were thrown into withdrawal… possible stroking or dying … just suffer in pain… or committed suicide.

Dr. Ibsen picked up those pts and is working with a Naturalist in his complex to move as many people as possible over to MMJ and he is attempting to reduce the dose of others where medically appropriate. Of course, these things do not happen overnight.

Here is where I wrote about Dr. Ibsen’s initial Medical Board hearing a few weeks ago https://www.pharmaciststeve.com/?p=7230

Notice that one of Pharmacists that testified… was testifying about NUMBERS OF DOSES…  I love Pharmacists that are all about statistics … really dehumanizes pt care. I am told that another Pharmacist testified and referred to Dr. Ibsen as IMMORAL.. because he was writing opiates for these pts.

It is my understanding that the DEA took no action… but the Medical Licensing Board has not concurred with the DEA’s determination and proceeding with hearings about his prescribing practices. It is my understanding that at one chain where “Health is everything” blackballed” all of Dr. Ibsen’s Rxs and many of this pts have heard the all too familiar phrase “I’m not comfortable” from other Pharmacists in the area.

As you read the letter, you will notice that I did not use the phrase “war on drugs” once.. and that was intentional. If the bureaucrats want to  have a war on drugs.. go after the diverters of legal drugs to the street and those that import illegal drugs. They are IN THE BUSINESS of selling illegal drugs..

I have put it in two formats … feel free to use it and the text as you see fit.  Those in those anti-opiate groups… get attention.. because they are VISIBLE and VOCAL and COMMUNICATE with the media and bureaucrats.

One of a couple dozen vets every day

Marine’s mom plans to sue VA over son’s death

http://www.thestate.com/2014/11/15/3813342/marines-mom-plans-to-sue-va-over.html

His mother, Janine Lutz, poured her grief into creating a foundation to help troubled veterans. And then she got angry. Now Lutz has sent an official letter of intent to sue the VA for wrongful death, accusing the doctors of prescribing her son powerful drugs even after he told them the medication made him feel suicidal.

 

They’re WATCHING…

http://www.chicagoinjurylawblog.com/2013/07/former-pharmacist-sues-cvs.html#more

Former Pharmacist Sues CVS

July 26, 2013

228782238_01c6e2ad96.jpgWrongful termination lawyers at Pintas & Mullins report that a veteran CVS pharmacist recently filed a lawsuit against the healthcare chain alleging he was wrongfully discharged. He claims that his termination was in part due to his complaints of understaffing, which put increased pressure on pharmacists and led to medication errors.

There has been mounting tension between stores like CVS and Walgreens and its pharmacists in recent years, as employers try to increase prescription output while revenue slips to historic lows. The plaintiff, Pennsylvania resident Joseph Zorek, has a second lawsuit pending in state court against the chain. In this case he is alleging CVS harassed him by attempting to relocate him after he complained about staffing practices.

Zorek was employed as a pharmacy manager at a 24-hour CVS from 1968 until 2012. Despite it being the area’s busiest CVS store, management requested a 20% cutback in pharmacy technician hours. This subsequently led to an increase in mistakes in labeling and filling prescriptions.

Prescription and medication errors can be extraordinarily dangerous, even fatal in some patients who are on rigid, long-term medication regimens. Zorek told the Wall Street Journal that he and his staff were berated after the cutbacks because they were unable to meet the prescription sales metrics.

Behind Walgreens, CVS is the nation’s second-largest pharmacy chain. In 2012, for the first time in nearly 60 years, American spending on prescription drugs fell. Experts assert that this trend is influenced by heightened use of generic drugs, which are significantly less expensive than brands but are required to use the exact same ingredients.

A little more than four billion prescriptions were dispensed in the U.S. in 2012, which is more than double the rate in 1996. In the six years between 1996 and 2012, however, the number of drug stores in the country remained constant, at around 55,000. Not surprisingly, pharmacists working in these stores have felt the brunt of increased workloads, high-stress environments, and unrealistic expectations for revenue and output.

According to a recent study, about 75% of Oregon’s chain pharmacists said their work environment did not support patient safety. In response to this report, Oregon legislators decided to increase their ability to levy fines, revoke pharmacy licenses, and implement other disciplinary measures if pharmacy conditions were in any way endangering public safety.

Lawsuits such as Zorek’s have proliferated considerably within the past ten years, as overworked pharmacists file complaints with state boards and legislatures. Among their complaints include lengthy daily shifts and illegal lack of breaks.

Pharmacists and employees, however, are not the only ones filing lawsuits against CVS for its unsafe practices. In April 2013, the family of a 58-year-old woman sued CVS after a medication error caused her death. The Florida woman died in May 2011 after filling five prescriptions when she was meant to have only four. The fifth medication, 500 mgs of hydrocodone, was prescribed by a different doctor than the woman’s and was meant for an entirely different CVS patient. Hydrocodone is a narcotic painkiller, extremely addictive and dangerous in patients who are not prescribed.

The woman took all five medications given to her by the CVS pharmacist and consequently died a few days later. An autopsy revealed she died of multiple drug intoxication. A similar lawsuit against Walgreens recently concluded with a $33.3 million jury verdict awarded to the family of a woman who died after taking improperly-dosed drugs. The Walgreens reportedly gave her 10 times her prescribed dosage of cancer medication, causing a brain hemorrhage and paralysis.

Dangerous drug lawyers at Pintas & Mullins have decades of experience advocating on behalf of those seriously injured or killed by defective, recalled, or improperly prescribed medications. If you or a loved one fell victim to such an incident, you have important legal rights, and may be entitled to significant compensation for your pain and suffering.