Pubdate: Mon, 12 May 2003
Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN)
Copyright: 2003 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co.
Contact:  http://www.knoxnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226
Author: Roger Alford, Associated Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone)

APPALACHIA EXCISES DRUG-SUPPLYING DOCS

Communities' Health Outweighs Shortage Of Physicians: Officials

PIKEVILLE, Ky. - More than a dozen Appalachian doctors, many of them 
recruited to work in the medically underserved region, have been taken away 
from their patients in handcuffs for allegedly supplying drug addicts with 
powerful narcotics.

In eastern Kentucky alone, seven small-town doctors are in prison or on 
their way for illegally prescribing drugs like the painkiller OxyContin. At 
least six others have been arrested in the hills of West Virginia, Virginia 
and southern Ohio.

Advocates for the mountain region say that while the loss of so many 
doctors leaves a void, in these circumstances, the departures can only 
improve medical care.

"As badly as we need more physicians, we certainly don't need the type that 
will violate their oaths and do much more harm than good," said Ewell 
Balltrip, executive director of the Kentucky Appalachian Commission.

Federal and state law enforcement agencies began cracking down on wayward 
physicians in Appalachia in 2000, after OxyContin, intended for cancer 
patients and others suffering from severe pain, began showing up in large 
quantities on the black market.

The first eastern Kentucky physician snared in the crackdown - Dr. Ali 
Sawaf, 61, of Harlan - had turned to illegally prescribing OxyContin and 
other painkillers after he lost his $250,000-a-year job at a regional clinic.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Roger West said at the time that Sawaf handed out 
prescriptions almost as quickly as he could write them.

The latest physician to plead guilty, Dr. David Procter, 52, of South 
Shore, traded painkillers for sex. He admitted to a federal judge that he 
had sexual relations with two female patients after they became hooked on 
the drugs.

Most of the doctors caught in the past two years had been recruited to the 
region to help care for rural residents, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Pat 
Molloy.

"They may not have stepped over the line before they got here, but clearly 
they were corruptible," Molloy said.

Legitimate doctors have nothing to fear when they appropriately prescribe 
medications, Molloy said. The doctors who have been prosecuted, he said, 
were flagrant violators.

East Tennessee has seen its share of doctors who became drug peddlers.

Just last week, Seymour physician Christopher Castle pleaded guilty in U.S. 
District Court to the illegal distribution of prescription drugs. Documents 
allege Castle himself was addicted to prescription medicine.

Former Pigeon Forge Dr. Joseph Hayes was arrested in 1991 after authorities 
found 10,000 prescription pills stockpiled inside his home. Hayes had been 
under investigation for years for handing out prescriptions to addicts.

A Florida doctor was convicted of manslaughter in the OxyContin overdose 
deaths of four patients. A Connecticut physician, nicknamed "Dr. Feelgood" 
by police for the prescriptions he wrote for OxyContin and other 
painkillers, was convicted last year on multiple counts.

Authorities blame the abuse of OxyContin for scores of overdose deaths in 
the Appalachian region and beyond.

If taken properly, the drug is released slowly into the body. But abusers 
circumvent the time-release by crushing the pills and inhaling or injecting 
the powder to get the same kind of euphoric high that heroin brings.

Larry Bailey of Grayson said he believes his son would still be alive if 
unscrupulous doctors had not been so willing to feed his addiction.

At first, Paul Bailey, 35, had a legitimate need for medication to ease 
severe back pain. But the last time he visited Dr. Rodolfo Santos of South 
Shore, he left with prescriptions for painkillers, tranquilizers and muscle 
relaxants. It was a combination of those pills that claimed his life.

Santos was convicted last month of overprescribing drugs. Larry Bailey had 
been in the courtroom during Santos' trial.

"Being angry doesn't solve anything," Larry Bailey said. "But I was 
thrilled to see him being put out of business.'

The jury recommended that Santos, who was recruited to work in eastern 
Kentucky, serve 16 years in prison. He could be eligible for parole in a 
little more than three years.

Procter, the physician who owned the clinic where Santos worked, pleaded 
guilty in April to one count of conspiracy and two counts of illegally 
prescribing controlled substances, and faces 10 to 12 years in prison.

In an effort to get more doctors into rural Appalachia, area leaders got a 
medical school established in 1997. As of this month, the Pikeville College 
School of Osteopathic Medicine will have graduated 168 doctors.

The new doctors will immediately begin to narrow the physician-to-patient 
ratio, easily replacing the physicians who have been sent to prison, said 
Dr. John Strosnider, dean of the college.

Strosnider said he has no doubt that, as a result of the crackdown, 
legitimate physicians are more careful about prescribing OxyContin and 
other potent painkillers.

"They're leery that patients may be trying to fool them," Strosnider said.
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