Posted on 06/20/2007 5:40:59 PM PDT by neverdem
Ronald McIver is a prisoner in a medium-security federal compound in Butner, N.C. He is 63 years old, of medium height and overweight, with a white Santa Claus beard, white hair and a calm, direct and intelligent manner. He is serving 30 years for drug trafficking, and so will likely live there the rest of his life. McIver (pronounced mi-KEE-ver) has not been convicted of drug trafficking in the classic sense. He is a doctor who for years treated patients suffering from chronic pain. At the Pain Therapy Center, his small storefront office not far from Main Street in Greenwood, S.C., he cracked backs, gave trigger-point injections and put patients through physical therapy. He administered ultrasound and gravity-inversion therapy and devised exercise regimens. And he wrote prescriptions for high doses of opioid drugs like OxyContin.
McIver was a particularly aggressive pain doctor. Pain can be measured only by how patients say they feel: on a scale from 0 to 10, a report of 0 signifies the absence of pain; 10 is unbearable pain. Many pain doctors will try to reduce a patients pain to the level of 5. McIver tried for a 2. He prescribed more, and sooner, than most doctors.
Some of his patients sold their pills. Some abused them. One man, Larry Shealy, died with high doses of opioids that McIver had prescribed him in his bloodstream. In April 2005, McIver was convicted in federal court of one count of conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and eight counts of distribution. (He was also acquitted of six counts of distribution.) The jury also found that Shealy was killed by the drugs McIver prescribed. McIver is serving concurrent sentences of 20 years for distribution and 30 years for dispensing drugs that resulted in Shealys death. His appeals to the...
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
It’s the system’s way of venting hate for doctors.
Great post.
Thanks,
Eaker
I agree with the rant, and will add that it doesn't help that the government doesn't help the situation.
Most people don't even realize how oxymoronic it is to call drugs like meth "narcotics".
Updated 06/14/2007 11:52:30 AM CDT
Dave Ryan/The Enterprise
Maj. Jimmy Singletary, right, talks with Deputy Chief Ron Hobbs, left, outside the Triangle Medical Clinic across from the Gateway Shopping Center. The clinic was one of the raid sites. Federal and state law enforcement seized hundreds of documents Wednesday to see if there is enough evidence to prosecute several area doctors suspected of doling out prescription drugs without medical justification.Tim Chavers, 25, made the 300-mile drive Wednesday morning from Oak Grove, La., to visit the Beaumont clinic.
"It's an ongoing investigation. We'll later determine from our analysis of the evidence if prosecution is warranted," Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Hobbs said.
Two pain management clinics, four pharmacies and one residence were raided under the warrants signed by U.S. Magistrate Keith Giblin.
Raid sites were Triangle Medical Clinic, 3843 Stagg Drive, Beaumont; Northway Medical Clinic, 3737 N. 16th St., Orange; Storm Pharmacy, 3141 College St., Beaumont; Luparello's Corner Pharmacy, 3570 Fannett Road, Beaumont; Lifechek Drug, 3701 Gulfway Drive, Port Arthur; and T&T Pharmacy, 315 N. Main St., Vidor. The residence was located in the 4700 block of Ashdown Lane in Beaumont.
Names of individuals were not released.
"We feel prescription drug abuse is killing as many - if not more - people than crystal meth and cocaine," Jefferson County Sheriff's Department Maj. Jim Singletary said. "Now, we have to prove that."
The regular patients of Triangle Medical Clinic were undeterred by the commotion, still attempting to get their prescriptions.
"That shows how out-of-control the situation has become," Singletary said. "We had news media and law enforcement in front of the store and yet we still had 27 people enter the clinic, looking for prescriptions."
Beaumont police arrested three would-be patients on outstanding warrants, including a 46-year-old Vidor man named in a felony warrant from Missouri.
He said he has suffered unbearable pain since a car accident left him wheelchair-bound in 1999, and when he runs out of the medication prescribed for him by his Louisiana doctor, he comes to Texas.
Chavers had just paid the $110 fee for his prescription at the cash-only clinic minutes before the raid began. He waited outside the clinic for more than six hours, hoping to get his money back.
David Barker, a 57-year-old construction sandblaster, drove in from Baton Rogue, La.
"The doctors (in Louisiana) say the pain is all in my head. I got kin around here who said I could get my medication here," he said as he leaned against the wall next to the clinic's entrance shortly after the raid began.
A neighbor of the Beaumont clinic, which is located in a Gateway strip mall, said she will not miss the clinic.
"We just don't feel safe," said Valerie Johnson, 29, assistant manager at Beaumont Financial Co., a signature loan business.
She has had to call the police at least five times since the clinic opened in February, she said.
"We've seen people out there staggering like drunks, then they bring kids with them," she said. "It's just scary."
Singletary, who leads the county narcotics unit, said problems have occurred ever since pain management clinics began to open.
"The laws are so vague in this area that's it has made it very difficult to do what we need to do for a criminal investigation," Singletary said.
All drugs in the United States fall into Schedule I through V classifications designated by the Drug Enforcement Administration.
Schedule I drugs are illegal narcotics such as cocaine, marijuana and heroin while Schedule V drugs are over-the-counter medications. Schedule II drugs are potent medications such as morphine and Ritalin. Schedule III and IV drugs are the pain medications such Xanax, Lorcet, Soma and oxycontin, drugs prescribed by unscrupulous pain management clinics.
Doctors in Texas are not required to report prescriptions of Schedule III and IV drugs, which means there is no way to track who is getting how much of these drugs. Some patients collect as many prescriptions as they can from a number of doctors, a practice called doctor shopping.Senate Bill 1879, authored by Tommy Williams, R-The Woodlands, would change drug reporting requirements and now waits on Gov. Rick Perry's desk for his approval.
Three area doctors who ran pain management clinics have had their medical licenses suspended the Texas Medical Board.
Two of them were penalized for prescribing the same "pain cocktail" of Xanax, Lorcet and Soma to every patient they saw without conducting an adequate medical examination, according to the medical board.
paulsmartinez@beaumontenterprise.com
(409) 880-0737
Updated 06/14/2007 11:52:30 AM CDT©The Beaumont Enterprise 2007
What a shame though that this poor soul was not medicated to the point where he could die slowly and in the presence of his family.
I suppose the stupid doctor thought that giving him large quantities of opiates would cause him to get addicted. I'll bet that a lot of people, especially with intractable pain at the end of life (or perhaps not at the end of life), commit suicide.
I honestly don't know why people go through the trouble of doing this. They have to deal with the hassle of waiting to be seen, the cost of visiting a facility to get a prescription, and the cost of the medicine assuming they even get the prescription anyway. Instead of imposing their addiction/habit on the legitimate medical area, they only need to obtain seeds(which is very easy) and grow a certain type of flower. They could have a virtually endless supply of what makes them 'happy' right in their own garden, and they won't have to make it hard on everyone else. Most narcotics are derived from this flower that we often hear about being a problem in Afghanistan, and it will easily grow anywhere in the world.
How stupid this statement is. They are talking about people showing up for a doctor's appointment as if they are junkies showing up at a crackhouse looking for a 'fix'.
It keeps the DEA employed and prosecutors in high publicity cases. Sending a doctor to prison is a plumb for any ambitious prosecutor.
Thanks for the text & link.
My elderly father has advanced lung cancer, emphysema, and advanced osteoporosis (I hope I spelled all that correctly). He was in extreme pain all the time. His doctor would only prescribe Tylenol!
I called a psychiatrist friend of mine and asked him what to do (he said for Dad to ask for a morphine patch), along with my Dad’s doctor (who would not return my calls) and the hospital’s social worker. Finally, a week and a half later, my Dad’s doctor gave him a low dose morphine patch, which helps a lot more than Tylenol ever did.
Now, in my Dad’s case, the doctor’s do have to worry about respiratory failure, because of the large tumor in his lung and his emphysema. There must be a trade-off between that and quality of life, though.
I think a lot of doctors, based on my vast experiences with them both as a patient and as the parent or daughter of a patient, are afraid to prescribe narcotics, or at least to prescribe them in sufficient doses at which to satisfactorily alleviate severe pain.
When seeking adequate pain relief for myself or a member of my family, I am frequently forced to pull out my “I am a lawyer” card, and it’s the only time I have ever had to play that card.
Your words were very wise and perceptive. I absolutely agree with all you said!
In your case when you pull out your lawyer card, I’d refer you to another doctor. Intimidation will not get you good medical care!
If someone has life destroying pain, they should have access to whatever drug they need.
You made so much semse that now I hate you.
I am subtle, not mean and threatening.
I have cervical arthritis and an arthritic sternum from two surgeries and some other chronic pain that I mostly live with.
But when it is too much, I take opioids....there is simply no substitute.
They are like any other drug except they make most folks feel relaxed and fairly happy but...they have can be used repsonsibly for pain....no doubt about it.
like any other drug, willpower and resist abuse.
I don’t drink or use anything else...period and never ever anything like Rush (allegedly)...my avaliability of narcotics is basically unlimited with my maladies...all of which require surgery but I don’t know how anyone short of bone cancer takes the doses we hear about...200mg of Oxycotin in a day...I do not take Oxycotin....I don’t like anything that long lasting...I’d rather have more short term control on my dosage
they are not telling the whole picture on this doc....
there have always been script doctors...in my day it was for quaaludes or amphetamines
acupuncture helps too but sorta hard to walk around like Hellraiser
I know folks doing life with no parole for large scale marihuana smuggling...some went in in the late 80s in their early 30s..
drug sentencing in the Feds is plumb crazy
that is not a bad cocktail for someone with acute neuro-muscular pain.
carisprodal (soma) which breaks down to Miltown...a sedative....is a great muscle relaxer
xanax relaxes and also has some muscle relaxing properties...valium is better
Loracet is hydrocodone .....a not too shabby mid level narcotic
any mix like that should be seriously observed though by homecare or hospital...not for driving
I mainly posted this to show how arbitrary the law can be about treating pain. I remember reading a malpractice case where the doc was sued successfully for not adequately treating pain. Docs are between a rock and a hard place. When they dump the BATF & E, they can do the same with the DEA.
Good post.
Perhaps you can educate me a little on this. I’ve never quite understood the “abuse” of pain meds. Having been in college in the 80’s I do understand what “getting high” means with regard to various recreational chemistry. ([ahem] Not that I did any of that myself).
Anyway... that was all many years ago. But a couple of years ago I had a health issue that required some surgery (at first without anesthetic which was, in a word, no fun) but ended up on a morphine IV for a couple of days that was... wonderful. When I was getting out of the hospital, the Dr gave me a script for Oxycontin, as he said I should expect some significant pain for a little while as I recovered.
Well, as it turned out, there was some pain but it wasn’t all that bad and I didn’t dive into the Oxycontin. But one day I figured “what the heck” and took some just to see what all the fuss was about.
I was really disappointed. Sure, the pain was taken care of, but there was ~nothing~ in terms of euphoria or any kind of a “high”. I took a fair dose, not a whole lot, but enough that I figure if there was anything to feel I’d have felt it. I ended up throwing out the rest of the script once the event was over.
I really don’t understand why anybody would bother to “abuse” this sort of thing. If you wanna get high, take something that gets you high. But it ain’t this.
Any help here?
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