Tag: Death Certificate Project

  • Death Certificate Project Goes Too Far, Addiction Specialist Says

    Death Certificate Project Goes Too Far, Addiction Specialist Says

    “Scaring providers into not prescribing opioids, I think that is not the ethically appropriate way to go forward,” said one addiction expert.

    Dr. Ako Jacintho, a family practitioner in San Francisco, says that he saw the opioid epidemic coming. His patients were asking for stronger medications and more pills. Instead of filling their requests, Jacintho trained as an addiction specialist, hoping to head off the problem, according to NPR

    However, that hasn’t protected him from an investigation that the California Medical Board is conducting into possible misuse of prescriptions. Jacintho received a letter from the board as part of the Death Certificate Project, which is examining death records in the state and seeking information from doctors who wrote prescriptions that may have contributed to fatal overdoses. 

    In Jacintho’s case, the board wanted to know about a 2012 methadone prescription that he wrote for a patient who later fatally overdosed on methadone and Benadryl. Jacintho reviewed the patient’s records—which the medical board had requested—but stuck by his decision to use methadone to treat the patient’s pain. 

    “If they’re looking for clinicians who are overprescribing, I’m the wrong doctor,” he said.

    Jacintho said that it’s especially unfair to look at prescribing practices from seven years ago in light of our new understanding of opioids. In 2012, when he wrote the prescription, doctors were told to treat pain aggressively, even by the California Medical Board’s own recommendations. 

    “It actually says that no physician will receive disciplinary action for prescribing opioids to patients with intractable pain,” Jacintho said. ”This person had intractable pain.”

    The letter from the board alleged that Jacintho prescribed toxic levels of the medication, but the doctor argues that it’s not that clear cut. “Toxicity is a very subjective word. What’s a toxic level for someone may not be a toxic level for someone else.”

    After the letter, Jacintho further reduced the amount of opioids that he prescribes to patients, something that worries Dr. Phillip Coffin, director of substance use research at the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

    “It’s like leaving a pair of scissors in an abdomen after surgery. If you’re just going to discontinue opioids, basically you’re ripping out the scissors and telling the person: ‘Good luck.’ Let them deal with the intestinal perforation on their own,” he said. “Scaring providers into not prescribing opioids, I think that is not the ethically appropriate way to go forward.”

    Kim Kirchmeyer, executive director of the medical board, said that most of the doctors who have received letters have not faced disciplinary action, although formal complaints have been filed against 25 doctors. She said that despite concern the death certificate project will continue, systematically working through records from previous years. 

    “If we save one life through this project, that is meeting the mission of the board, and that makes this project so worth it,” she said.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "Death Certificate Project" Helps Identify Doctors Who Overprescribe

    "Death Certificate Project" Helps Identify Doctors Who Overprescribe

    The crackdown has spooked physicians, including some who say they’re now less inclined to treat complex patients. 

    Hundreds of California physicians are under investigation for their prescribing habits, as the state medical board cracks down on overprescribing.

    Under the “Death Certificate Project,” the Medical Board of California is trying to take a proactive approach to identifying overprescribing behavior.

    The board, a state agency that licenses/disciplines physicians, has reviewed death certificates that list a prescription opioid (or more) as the cause of death, then identify the provider(s) who prescribed the controlled substance to the patient “within three years of death, regardless of whether the particular drug caused the death or whether that doctor prescribed the lethal dose,” MedPage Today reports.

    Prescribers were matched to patients through California’s prescription drug database, CURES (California Controlled Substance Utilization Review and Evaluation System).

    “Our goal is consumer protection… (to) identify physicians who may be inappropriately prescribing to patients and to make sure that those individuals are educated (about opioid guidelines), and where there are violations of the Medical Practices Act, the board takes (disciplinary) action,” said Kimberly Kirchmeyer, the medical board’s executive director.

    So far, 462 physicians have been identified as “warranting an investigation of patients’ files,” according to MedPage. Of these cases, 223 have been closed for either insufficient evidence, no violation, their license was already revoked/surrendered, or the physician has died.

    Nine physicians have been targeted in opioid-related prescribing accusations filed by the state Attorney General; four of them were already under scrutiny on “unrelated charges.”

    The state’s crackdown has spooked physicians, including some who say they’re now less inclined to treat complex patients.

    “When you hear a bunch of doctors all at the same time all getting the same letter, and you realize they’re going through the same thing, you see why some are saying [to patients], ‘Sorry, if you have a lot of medical conditions, we’re not going to take care of you,’” said Dr. Brian J. Lenzkes, a San Diego internist and one of the targets of the Death Certificate Project.

    Last December, Lenzkes received a letter from the state medical board notifying him that there had been a “complaint filed against you” about a patient who had died of a prescription drug overdose in 2013.

    According to Lenzkes, the patient’s severe condition required him to take a regimen of prescription drugs including painkillers.

    After receiving the letter, however, Lenzkes says he’s more wary of taking on pain management, saying that he’ll refer patients to pain specialists instead. “I’m not taking any more. That’s just how I feel,” he said.

    View the original article at thefix.com