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"The Doctor Wasn't Cruel Enough" - How one physician escaped the panic over prescription drugs
Reason ^ | June 2, 2006 | Maia Szalavitz

Posted on 06/05/2006 6:58:32 PM PDT by neverdem

When Dr. Paul Heberle was arrested last April, dozens of chronic pain patients were left in agony. One of Heberle's patients called no fewer than 37 doctors seeking care—all of whom refused to see him once he revealed the name of his prior provider. Finally, Robert Holmes, a 40-year-old man who suffers from a lung injury and requires supplemental oxygen to breathe, resorted to visiting a methadone clinic for drug addicts. He was turned away there, too. More than twenty others reported similar experiences at a meeting of patients affected by the arrest. Six would later attempt suicide.

For many patients, the situation was devastatingly familiar. Heberle had agreed to care for many of them after their previous physician was arrested and then convicted on some of the same charges that Heberle now faced: illegal prescribing of narcotics. That doctor, David Klees, got 12 to 24 years in prison. This time, however, the government would find it wasn't so easy to railroad a pain doctor.

In the last five years—since a media panic over prescription drug abuse began with law-enforcement-driven reports of an "Oxycontin epidemic"—dozens of doctors have been prosecuted for "overprescribing" painkillers. The Justice Department and the DEA have pushed this aggressive new campaign in the war on drugs.

Overwhelmingly, these cases have resulted in convictions with heavy prison terms—or plea bargains with shorter sentences that nonetheless drove the doctors out of medicine. Advocates for pain patients report that, as a result, relief has been increasingly hard to find.

Fortunately, Heberle had an ally that Klees didn't: Siobhan Reynolds and her Pain Relief Network. As the DEA and local prosecutors went as far as creating a poster with Dr. Heberle's picture and the words "overprescribing controlled substances" and "Medicaid fraud" on it, Reynolds visited Erie, PA, to organize Heberle's patients and, for once, get their side of the story into the media.

Nearly all of the prior cases have followed a similar pattern. First, prosecutors blitz local media with reports of out-of-control prescription drug abuse problems and discuss the problem of "pill mills." Then, they swoop in with a SWAT team and arrest any doctor brave enough to actually treat chronic pain with doses of opioid medication large enough to work. They call him a "drug dealer" and "pusher with a pen."

Next, the prosecution brings out addicts for the cameras, who claim the doctor treated them without examining them and "caused" them to develop drug problems—but they don't mention the addicts' motivation for cooperating. In virtually all of these cases, addicts are motivated by reduced or dropped sentences charges from prosecutors, or by the hope of suing the doctors who got them "hooked." Prosecutors also usually fail to note that for most of these addicts, this is far from their first run-in with drug problems or the law.

At some point, however, the government team brings out its most devastating weapon: weeping relatives of patients who have died while under the doctor's care. Reporters are rarely keen to grill the grieving, so their stories tend to stress the prosecution's talking points rather than the fact that these deaths are virtually always either deliberate suicides or overdoses resulting from deliberate misuse of prescription medication. In the Heberle case, the death that started the investigation involved someone who had eaten a patch meant to be worn on the skin—thus immediately ingesting three days-worth of drugs.

Usually, the media buy the tale of evil substances and vile physician-pushers. But Reynolds offered a more compelling alternative narrative. She brought the suffering patients into the media eye. Rather than telling the tale of an evil drug-dealing doctor who brings down the poor addict, she and the patients provided another version of the story, in which the wonderful healer allows his grateful patients to function—until the cops drag him away.

And in fact, Reynolds' account is more accurate. Some 90 percent of people who abuse Oxycontin also have histories of using cocaine and psychedelic drugs. Were most of these people innocent "victims" of evil doctors? Isn't it more likely that they were prior heavy drug users who sought additional drugs and, because there's no objective way of measuring pain, were able to get them from compassionate doctors? Aren't doctors who do believe people's accounts of pain exactly the ones we want in practice?

In the Heberle case, one prosecution expert told the Erie Times-News that the doctor was:

prescribing painkillers to patients with documented prior substance-abuse problems and/or mental impairment.

The paper didn't note that there is nothing illegal about this. Nor did the reporter seem to realize that there's something profoundly sick about assuming that people who are mentally impaired or have a history of drug problems never need strong pain medication.

Fortunately, in the Heberle case, the jury didn't buy the lies. Heberle made no profit from the prescriptions he wrote; he was a former addict himself who was monitored for abstinence. What possible reason could such a person have for deliberately supplying addicts? The only sensible way to see him was as a caring physician, who, like anyone else, does not have a "pain-o-meter" or fool-proof lie detection device in his head or office.

The defense presented expert testimony that laid out the complexities of pain treatment. Although the prosecution essentially put on a malpractice case—representing violations of the standard of care as criminal when they actually are civil violations—the defense beat them back. Their cross examination of a prosecution witness who claimed that certain opioids should only be used for cancer pain was especially effective. The defense simply exhibited a small practice guide which shows that the medications are recommended for other pain as well.

Also effective was the defense expert, Frank Fisher, MD, one of the few physicians to be exonerated after being prosecuted for over-prescribing. He called the prosecution "a crime against humanity," and in conjunction with the defense team, debunked the idea that cutting off pain medication to people with past or even present addictions does anything to help them.

"They showed addictionology for the sham science that it is," says Reynolds, explaining that in previous cases, the defense often had a hard time getting the jury to see that medications can't "make" people into addicts and that no one, addicted or otherwise, benefits from a system where doctors presume all pain is faked.

"The government position is that the doctor wasn't cruel enough," she adds, describing how hard it was for previous defense teams to debunk the notion that addiction can be prevented or treated by stopping or failing to prescribe pain medication.

"By making the pain patients real, we made the good guys and the bad guys change places—and that's hard to do," she says.

Last week, Heberle was found not guilty on all charges. Unfortunately, at least one patient did not live to see the verdict— she had committed suicide, unable to find another doctor to prescribe the medications she needed. And Heberle, like Fisher, will no longer practice medicine, leaving many patients still without help.

As Reynolds asks, "How can they call this protecting the public health?" We hope the Heberle case is the beginning of the end of these senseless prosecutions.

 

Maia Szalavitz is a senior fellow at stats.org, a media watchdog group, and author of Help At Any Cost: How the Troubled-Teen Industry Cons Parents and Hurts Kids.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: dea; drugskilledbelushi; health; healthcare; libertarians; medicine; painreliefnetwork; siobhanreynolds; wod; wodlist
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To: rudabaga; freekitty
"Planned by people like Soros and that idiot, Soros..."

Posted by freekitty

are you joking? its the DEA! our fed government doing this. wtf does soros have to do with it?

Posted by rudabaga


Soros has nothing at all to do with this. Although he's a Eurotrash piece of $#!t wackjob who is a waste of breathable air, he would be in agreement with the jury on this particular matter.

Soros has been a strong advocate for Legalisation of drugs, all drugs. (proof that even a broken clock is right twice a day)
21 posted on 06/05/2006 10:31:27 PM PDT by Calvinist_Dark_Lord (I have come here to kick @$$ and chew bubblegum...and I'm all outta bubblegum! ~Roddy Piper)
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To: kara37
Who decides what's "overprescribing?" Some bureaucrat totally unfaniliar with the circumstances of a case and lacking the medical training and know how to decide how much relief a patient needs? To inflict suffering on the helpless is indefensible. Its high time the government stopped railroading doctors into prison for caring for their patients. No bureaucrat has ever treated a disease or ministered compassion to the dying. They need to get out of the way; we do not want to be a cruel society.

(Denny Crane: "Every one should carry a gun strapped to their waist. We need more - not less guns.")

22 posted on 06/05/2006 10:31:45 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: neverdem
I remember the discussion some ears ago when this subject was being hashed over in the congress - in regards to giving terminal cancer patients, whose pain was too severe for the drugs allowed. The medical filed wanted to have, i believe, heroin, available for these terminal patients.

The asinine reps in DC said:

"No. They might become addicted."

I wonder if, since then, any of these sanctimonious priggs have had to sit by the side of a loved one as they scream in unrelenting pain that the "allowed" drugs can't abate...and watch them die a long, barbaric death.

23 posted on 06/05/2006 10:48:46 PM PDT by maine-iac7 (Lincoln: "...but you can't fool all of the people all of the time.")
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To: Doctor Stochastic
War On Medicine being waged by the GOP.

it's been going on for decades - and it's all the GOP

yeah, right

Funny, I remember when my son was going thru the worst of his cancer - Carter was pres...

24 posted on 06/05/2006 10:54:27 PM PDT by maine-iac7 (Lincoln: "...but you can't fool all of the people all of the time.")
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To: goldstategop
When Hillary Clinton was pushing her socialist health care plan and claiming that there as a "health care crisis" I remember being horrified at all of the penalties proposed for doctors who deviated from the horribly complex "HillaryCare."
  Doctors shouldn't have to worry about politicians, accident lawyers, out of control prosecutors and "patients" who see them as lottery tickets. There is a lack of balance and it doesn't favor the doctors. When prosecutors are second-guessing a doctor's treatment, something is very very wrong.
25 posted on 06/05/2006 10:56:12 PM PDT by Maurice Tift
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To: tenthirteen

The current way of validating these "real" cases (i.e. the patient commits suicide in despair) leaves much to be desired.


26 posted on 06/05/2006 10:56:52 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck
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To: Fishing-guy
On top of that is these pain medications are potentially addictive.

True - but why deny them to terminal cancer patients, for example, that are in excruciating pain - They wont live long enough to become "addicted" but this is the excuse the sleazy reps in DC used...

27 posted on 06/05/2006 10:57:20 PM PDT by maine-iac7 (Lincoln: "...but you can't fool all of the people all of the time.")
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To: maine-iac7

No, they have the wealth and connections to send these unfortunates to, say, Sweden where they will not suffer that way.


28 posted on 06/05/2006 10:58:05 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck
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To: kara37
I volunteered at hospice, they could give as many drugs as they wanted to their patients. I even asked them about it. They said they will give whatever is needed to get rid of their pain. They had no limit.

That is not true. The patient's doctor has to prescribe the medication. "Hospice" can't prescribe anything.

29 posted on 06/05/2006 11:11:26 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: goldstategop
I've got a bad leg. I have had 7 surgeries on my knee in less than 4 years. My body does not like the total knee replacements and keeps creating rejection problems. I don't walk or sleep without clinical pain relief.

So what would these idiots have me do? I'm already scheduled for yet another total knee replacement in hopes that this different knee will be more compatible with my body.

Add one more piece to this puzzle. I'm allergic to most of the heavy pain killers. I have severe reactions to them. I'm left with a small handful that I can take.
Try having a knee replaced when you can't take morphine. It isn't much fun. I've been through it 4 times. These idiots are total DA SOB's.
30 posted on 06/05/2006 11:12:53 PM PDT by oldenuff2no
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To: Abram; albertp; AlexandriaDuke; Allosaurs_r_us; Americanwolf; Americanwolfsbrother; Annie03; ...
Libertarian ping.To be added or removed from my ping list freepmail me or post a message here
31 posted on 06/05/2006 11:15:24 PM PDT by freepatriot32 (Holding you head high & voting Libertarian is better then holding your nose and voting republican)
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To: kara37
I volunteered at hospice, they could give as many drugs as they wanted to their patients.

Depends on who is running the hospice. My Dad was in the only hospice available in his small town; it was in the hospital, and governed by the Doctors. He writhed in anguish while the idiots put morphine cream on his wrists.

We demanded in the last few days, after he was completely incoherent, that they sedate him. We were told that the Doctors were "afraid" to accidentally overdose him...a terminally ill cancer patient.

They upped the drugs; but not enough.

They also took out his saline IV without our permission...using the "no extraordinary means" provision that he had signed a few months earlier. That actually caused his incoherence and death. His lips cracked, while we desperately tried to get him any fluid that we could with their little "swabs."

The Doctors that allow this are ghouls and they should be forced to sit in the room twenty-four hours per day, right next to the family members, watching the biological effects that their decisions have on patients. The DEA agents who have caused this type of decision-making should be sitting right next to them.

32 posted on 06/05/2006 11:15:42 PM PDT by garandgal
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To: Wolfie

ping


33 posted on 06/05/2006 11:15:51 PM PDT by freepatriot32 (Holding you head high & voting Libertarian is better then holding your nose and voting republican)
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To: tenthirteen
Fine, prosecute them, not the doctor that is simply trying to help his patents.

The law needs to be clear on what is and is not illegal.

For the government to step in and arbitrarily decide that the doctor crossed the line and then send him/her to prison is not okay. Even if the doctor wins he/she is likely financially destroyed.
34 posted on 06/06/2006 12:22:12 AM PDT by DB (©)
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To: oldenuff2no

And they banned Vioxx, that has to really stink.


35 posted on 06/06/2006 12:28:54 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck
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To: oldenuff2no

I have chronic pain in my knees.

I take about 15 Naproxen pills a day, which scares the heck out of me.

Do you know of any other pain relievers that work?


36 posted on 06/06/2006 4:06:19 AM PDT by babydoll22 (The facts ma'am, just the facts. I don't give a s**t how you feel.)
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To: PaxMacian; WindMinstrel; philman_36; headsonpikes; cryptical; vikzilla; Quick1; gdani; ...

ping


37 posted on 06/06/2006 4:30:06 AM PDT by Wolfie
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To: babydoll22

There's a good possibility that a new class of pain relievers (not nsaids, acetominophen, nor opiates) based on poisons secreted by frogs will be available soon. The early results show promise. We can hope they are available sooner rather than later.


38 posted on 06/06/2006 5:12:51 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch ist der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Fishing-guy
"On top of that is these pain medications are potentially addictive."

So is alcohol, yet you can buy as much as you want OTC if you are over 21.

Do you favor all chronic pain sufferes to just 'deal with it' because someone MIGHT be lying?

39 posted on 06/06/2006 5:28:40 AM PDT by sweet_diane
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To: neverdem

Why are government agents so cruel, heartless and vindiuctive towards suffering human beings?

Because, like a dog licking his testicles, they can!


40 posted on 06/06/2006 5:58:58 AM PDT by headsonpikes (Genocide is the highest sacrament of socialism.)
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