Pot times
Doc Denounces 'War On Patients'
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1094/a07.htmlNewshawk: http://www.painreliefnetwork.org
Pubdate: Sat, 09 Jul 2005 DOC DENOUNCES 'WAR ON PATIENTS'
Source: Billings Gazette, The (MT)
Copyright: 2005 The Billings Gazette
Contact:
speakup@billingsgazette.com
Website: http://www.billingsgazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/515
Author: Diane Cochran, Gazette Staff
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n000/a210.html
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232
(Chronic Pain)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/motd.htm
(Pain Relief Network)
The federal government's war on drugs has turned into a witch hunt for doctors
who legitimately prescribe legal painkillers, says a California physician who
claims he was the target of an unethical federal investigation.
"The war on drugs has become a war on sick people," Dr. Frank
Fisher said Friday. "The war on drugs has morphed into a war on
patients, and the doctors are caught in the crossfire."
Fisher said the battle has erupted in Billings, where the Drug Enforcement
Administration is investigating neurologist Richard A. Nelson.
Nelson treated multiple chronic-pain sufferers with opioids, or narcotic
painkillers, until federal agents raided his West End clinic three months ago.
Fisher, whose general practice clinic near Redding, Calif., was shut down in
1999 by the DEA, spoke during a press conference in Billings on Friday.
"My patients were tossed into the street and told to fend for
themselves," Fisher said. "Up at the county clinic, they thought
they were addicts, and they detoxed them."
Fewer than 10 percent of Fisher's patients suffered from chronic pain, which he
treated with narcotics.
Prosecutors charged him with five counts of murder, alleging that five of his
patients died because of the medication he prescribed for them. One of
them died after the vehicle in which she was a passenger crashed.
According to Fisher, the charges came after undercover agents posing as patients
failed at least seven times to get him to write them prescriptions for fake
symptoms.
Ultimately, the murder charges and 91 misdemeanor counts of medical fraud were
dismissed. A jury acquitted Fisher of eight more fraud charges.
Fisher said it was all an attempt by the DEA to stop him from prescribing
narcotic painkillers.
And it worked.
"I would like to treat chronic-pain patients," he said.
"But it's too dangerous. It's suicidal."
Fisher and Siobhan Reynolds, president of the Pain Relief Network, said the DEA
has brought its scare tactics to Montana.
"This situation developing in Billings is going on all over the
country," Reynolds said during Friday's press conference.
"Patients in pain are being summarily removed from care through action
taken against their physicians."
When the DEA revokes a doctor's prescription-writing privileges - as it did in
Nelson's case - people in pain are often left with nowhere to turn, she said.
Many of Nelson's patients have said they cannot find another physician to treat
them.
"People assume everyone is getting what they need, so if people turn up
without meds, it must be because they did something wrong," Reynolds said.
"People who need meds can't get them."
To that end, Reynolds, who lives in New York City, has spearheaded a petition
drive in Billings asking the state's congressional delegation to initiate a
Senate Judiciary Committee investigation into the DEA. She delivered 330
signatures on Friday to the office of Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.
Reynolds said the Pain Relief Network is in the process of opening a Billings
office.
"We are going to keep on bringing it up until ( these people ) are no
longer victims of predation by the DEA," she said.
Jan Johnson, a patient of Nelson's, said on Friday that shutting down legitimate
sources for painkillers - such as Nelson's clinic - forces people to find the
drugs another way.
"The entire thing is supposed to be stopping the illegal sale of drugs, but
what it's doing is promoting it," Johnson said. "People are
going to do that because they are in a lot of pain."
The DEA has not said why it is investigating Nelson, although the agency
maintains that doctors who are doing nothing wrong should not fear
investigation.
Fisher traveled to Billings this week to see for himself whether Nelson was a
legitimate doctor or a drug dealer. After examining medical records and
meeting with patients Friday morning, Fisher said Nelson was doing nothing
wrong.
"I can tell you there's not a drug addict among them," he said of
Nelson's patients. "He used ( narcotics ) cautiously and sparingly,
and, from what I can see, he was doing a good job."
