U.S. Supreme Court Sides with Doctors Challenging Opioid Convictions

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By Nate Raymond

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(Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court just made it harder for prosecutors to win convictions of doctors accused of running “pill mills” and excessively prescribing opioids and other addictive drugs by requiring the government to prove that defendants knew their prescriptions had no legitimate medical purpose.

READ FULL STORY: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/u-s-supreme-court-sides-with-doctors-challenging-opioid-convictions/ar-AAYUg31?cvid=c26cb4159770466e984575227031e724

Related: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2012/02/26/medical-uses-of-abused-drugs/

FAKE Rx: https://medicalexecutivepost.com/2022/05/10/fake-prescription-drug-rx-example/

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The Pill Mill Epidemic

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What it is – How it works?

michelle

[By Michelle Peterman]

miche.peterman@gmail.com

People who are getting access to prescription medication illegally are on the rise, thanks to what the government and drug addiction specialists call “Pill Mills.”

The United States has a significant enough problem with people addicted to illegal substances, such as heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamines.

What Is A Pill Mill?

You may be asking yourself, “What’s A Pill Mill?” All over the US there are legitimate doctors and pain management centers that are in place to assist patients with managing pain. These centers take great care to make sure patients do not become addicted to their medications and will provide assistance if they do.

Unfortunately, there are pain management centers that operate as these “Pill Mills” and are glorified drug dealers. These people are as bad as the drug suppliers and traffickers who sell Heroin or Ice on the streets. Pill Mills will often have a walk in appointment policy, minimum record keeping methods, and armed guards. Other signs include accepting cash-only, no physical exams, and supplying patients with doses of narcotics that are over the authorized limits.

Many people who are legally prescribed medication may start self-medicating and become addicted, needing more and more drugs. These same individuals often turn to pill mills to gain access to prescriptions that more ethical doctors would not give them.

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Pill Mill Issues in Florida

It has been said that Florida is the epicenter of the pill mill industry. In 2010, as many as seven people were dying every day as a result of a prescription medication overdose in the State of Florida, and countless other deaths were occurring throughout The States. Authorities believed that Florida had become a haven for drug abusers and distributors to make huge profits in dispensing narcotics illegally.

In 2011, government took action and many pain management centers, medical practices, and clinics were raided. This happened in South Florida with the intention to crack down on the many “pill mills” that the authorities strongly suspected were prescribing Oxycodone in extremely high doses outside of controlled substance authority guidelines.

The authorities also found during their investigation that patients were recruited via the Internet. Six clinic owners and various other staff were indicted on charges that they conspired together to illegally supply patients with over 660,000 high and illegal doses of Oxycodone and collected over $22 million in profits.

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The DEA Wages War Against Pill Mills in the South

In 2010, Florida had over nine hundred registered pain management centers. As of January 2014, that number dropped to around three hundred and fifty clinics.

However, it seems that Georgia is now dealing with many of those businesses that fled Florida after stricter measures were implemented. Huffington Post reports that “The DEA is prosecuting pain clinic operators who used to do business in Florida and picked up and moved to Georgia immediately after Florida passed tougher restrictions in 2011.”

Moreover, just recently, Drug Enforcement Administration Raids ‘Pill Mills’ in Four Southern States, including Arkansas, Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi.

Assessment

Prescription drug abuse has been declared a massive epidemic in the United States and yet another fight the authorities are trying to win. Tougher regulations and crackdowns from the DEA seem to be making a dent in this major issue.

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ABOUT

Michelle is a former communications associate who transitioned into building her own freelance business. She enjoys health and staying on top of the latest news.  Sitting by the beach is one of her favorite activities in her free time.

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Doctor’s Lawsuit Targets Parents of Patient Who Overdosed

By Marshall Allen
ProPublica, Aug. 26, 2011, 10:57 am

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The dramatic rise in prescription narcotics use [1]—and the subsequent increase in overdose deaths—has led to a spate of lawsuits around the country targeting doctors for malpractice or running pill mills [2]. But legal experts say the case of one family physician in Henderson,Nev., stands out.

The case of Kevin Buckwalter

Dr. Kevin Buckwalter has turned the tables, filing a lawsuit against the parents of a young woman who died from an overdose of narcotics that he prescribed.

Buckwalter’s suit accuses John and Maggie DeBaun of abusing the legal process, intentionally inflicting emotional distress and interfering with his ability to do business by filing a medical malpractice case against him for the death of their daughter.

“I’ve never heard of such a lawsuit,” said Stacey Tovino, a professor at the William S. Boyd School of Law at theUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas. Tovino and otherNevada legal experts said it appears to them that Buckwalter abused the legal process in an attempt to intimidate the DeBauns.

Buckwalter did not respond to a call for comment. His brother Bryce, who serves as his attorney, declined to comment about the lawsuit. In an email, he accused this reporter of harassment for attempting to contact his brother, said he would seek a restraining order and threatened to sue ProPublica.

A Controversial Subject?

Buckwalter has been a subject of controversy for several years. A 2008 Las Vegas Sun investigation [3], also by this reporter, highlighted the opinions of four pain-management specialists who reviewed Buckwalter’s care of patients and said it appeared to be negligent.

Staci Voyda, a teenager addicted to prescription narcotics, wrote in her journal that she went to Buckwalter to get off drugs. But his treatment included ramping up her dosages of narcotics. She killed herself in August 2007, and family members say the drugs pushed her over the edge.

Another Buckwalter patient, 69-year-old Barbara Baile, was prescribed large doses of narcotics, which caused constipation so severe it ruptured her bowels. A subsequent infection killed her.

These are prescriptions for Xanax and morphine written by Dr. Kevin Buckwalter for Andrea and Clint Duncan. (Sam Morris/Las VegasSun) | See Las Vegas Sun’s full investigation on Painful Painkillers [4].

The DeBauns’ daughter, Andrea Duncan, died in 2005 from intoxication with opiates and benzodiazepines [5], a class of drugs that includes Valium and Xanax. Four days earlier, her husband Clint, also a Buckwalter patient, had overdosed on prescription narcotics and died.

In a 2007 videotaped deposition [6] for an unrelated lawsuit, Buckwalter described the treatment he provided Duncan. Under oath, Buckwalter said he did not examine Duncan on her first visit because he “did not have time,” yet prescribed her 300 tablets of Xanax, an anti-anxiety medication, and the painkiller hydrocodone, a synthetic opiate.

The following year, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners stripped Buckwalter of his license to prescribe controlled substances. The DEA attributed at least eight overdose deaths [7] to Buckwalter. The medical board blamed him for four cases of malpractice [8], including one in which the patient died. Buckwalter closed his practice.

Dallaslawyer Kay Van Wey, who specializes in pill mill cases, filed six lawsuits against Buckwalter on behalf of patients who died or were harmed. The DeBaun case was filed in April 2009, past the statute of limitations in Nevada. But Van Wey argued in the complaint that the deadline should be extended because Buckwalter allegedly concealed his negligence and altered medical records.

A judge didn’t buy the argument and dismissed the case. Buckwalter claims in his lawsuit that the DeBauns sued to harass and annoy him.

Buckwalter has denied all of the allegations that he provided substandard care. His lawsuit against the medical board to get his prescribing privileges reinstated was unsuccessful.

Jeffrey Stempel, a professor at the UNLV law school, said that for the DeBauns’ lawsuit to be considered an “abuse” of the legal process, there would have to be some ulterior motive other than seeking damages for their daughter’s death.

Assessment

Ann McGinley, another professor at the UNLV law school, said it takes more than simply filing a lawsuit to support a claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress. And given that Buckwalter lost his ability to prescribe controlled substances in 2008, it’s difficult to see how the DeBauns interfered with Buckwalter’s ability to conduct his business, she said.

McGinley said that if lawsuits like Buckwalter’s became more common, they could have a chilling effect, discouraging patients from pursuing legitimate malpractice claims. “My concern is that other doctors will take this on as something that they will do regularly,” she said.

Link: http://www.propublica.org/article/doctors-lawsuit-targets-parents-of-patient-who-overdosed

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