Pubdate: Thu, 15 Dec 2005
Source: Arkansas Times (Little Rock, AR)
Copyright: 2005 Arkansas Times Inc.
Contact:  http://www.arktimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/583
Author: Doug Smith
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain)

DR. KALE VS. THE DRUG WARRIORS

Oxycontin Is Not the Problem, He Says. 'The DEA Is the Problem.'

FORT SMITH - This is Dr. Robert Kale discussing the drug problem in America:

"The drug problem has gotten worse since the inception of the DEA 
[federal Drug Enforcement Administration]. The pressure they put on 
caused an increase in price. When that happened, a whole bunch of 
entrepreneurs got in the business, just like Prohibition. Drugs 
hadn't been rampant in the schools before the DEA. In the '60s, 
amphetamines were widely available, but they weren't used 
recreationally. They were used to lose weight. Truck drivers used 
them to stay awake. [So did college students cramming for tests.]

"Congress told the DEA, 'You're not making a difference.' The DEA 
needed something it could be effective on. So about 2001 or 2002, 
they designated Oxycontin as the number-one drug problem in the 
country." Oxycontin is a pain-relieving drug, one of a group known as 
"opioids," that is prescribed by doctors. "Look in the paper at the 
drug arrests. You'll see methamphetamine, marijuana, cocaine and 
heroin arrests. And a lot of those are just from random stops on the 
highway. There's no telling the amount of illegal drugs that never 
get caught. Much less often do you see arrests involving prescription 
drugs, and when you do, it's usually in combination with nonprescription drugs.

"Meth is the big problem, not Oxycontin. But the DEA likes to go 
after doctors, not the people making meth. Doctors are in 
air-conditioned offices, and they don't carry guns. That's a lot 
better than going out in tick-infested woods looking for somebody who 
may be armed and hostile. Also, doctors are easily intimidated. So 
DEA, being the cowards and scum that they are, goes after doctors instead."

In the end, it turns out there's an even bigger drug problem than 
meth. "The DEA is the problem. The DEA is out to prevent legitimate 
patients from getting legitimate prescriptions from legitimate physicians."

The DEA has certainly been a problem for Kale, a Fort Smith pain 
management physician who's no longer practicing. A couple of years 
ago, after the state Medical Board had suspended his license, thus 
denying him the right to prescribe drugs in Arkansas, and the DEA 
took away his DEA registration, thus denying him the right to 
prescribe controlled drugs anywhere. Even when the Medical Board 
found him innocent of drug violations and restored his license, the 
lack of a DEA registration effectively kept him out of business. "A 
pain management doctor can't open a practice and not prescribe pain 
medicine." Last month, the DEA returned his registration, having held 
it for 22 months after the Medical Board had reinstated him. He can 
(Voluble on most subjects, Kale is rather tight-lipped, and vague, 
when asked how he's been getting by without his medical practice. 
"We've been selling a lot of things," he said, and "I have a small 
disability." Perhaps he had a lot saved up, although he said that he 
only saw 15 patients a day -- believing he couldn't do justice to 
more -- and therefore made less than $50,000 a year. "What doctor does that?")

Kale's opinion of the Medical Board, and especially its chairman, Dr. 
W. Ray Jouett of Little Rock, is similar to his opinion of the DEA. 
He said that like most doctors these days, the doctors on the Medical 
Board work for insurers, since it's insurers who pay for treatment. 
"I'm one of the last few doctors in this world that believes I work 
for the patient," he said. The Medical Board is hostile to pain 
management physicians, he said, because pain management physicians 
diagnose chronic pain in their patients and prescribe long-term 
treatment. Insurance companies don't want to hear about long-term 
treatment, much less pay for it, Kale said.

Kale is 53, intense and outspoken. He's from Ohio and got his medical 
degree at Ohio State University, after which he served six years in 
the Navy. He's an anesthesiologist trained in pain management, he 
said, and he was recruited to this area to start an anesthesia 
program at Crawford Hospital in Van Buren. He worked as an operating 
room anesthesiologist until he had to leave the o.r. because of back 
trouble. In 1995, he opened a pain management office. His practice 
included acupuncture, which he'd studied and which he says is 
effective on certain kinds of pain.

Some doctors are skeptical of their patients' complaints, and are 
encouraged in their skepticism by the insurance companies, Kale said.

"A pain management doctor has to believe the patient when he says 
he's in pain. Otherwise, I can't be any good to him. I trust my 
patients. The patient has to keep records, he has to keep track of 
the pills he gets. He can't do that if he's abusing drugs."

In 2002, the Medical Board charged Dr. Kale with over-prescribing 
controlled substances and suspended his license. Then, according to 
the doctor, a DEA agent persuaded him to surrender his DEA 
registration, through trickery, not mentioning that he had a right to 
a hearing nor saying anything about possible DEA charges against him. 
He says he was told over a year later that he had given up his 
registration "in lieu of DEA charges and prosecutions."

Kale said the complaint that brought him before the Medical Board 
came from Dillard's, the department store chain headquartered in Little Rock.

"Dillard's wrote a complaint on me on a worker's comp patient. They 
sent a nurse to tell me they didn't want her [the patient] to get 
this expensive medication anymore. Her life was much better with the 
medication, but it was costing $1,000 a month." The Dillard's nurse 
said he was overdosing and told his nurse that if he didn't stop, 
he'd be in trouble with the Medical Board, he said. "Two weeks later, 
the Medical Board issued a subpoena."

The Medical Board eventually dropped the over-prescription charge, 
but found Kale guilty of violating a board regulation that requires 
pain management programs to offer interdisciplinary services, such as 
psychiatric and occupational therapy. A circuit court upheld the 
board's finding. Kale is appealing to a higher court. The board 
restored his license unconditionally and allowed him to apply for 
reinstatement of his DEA registration. He did apply, but the DEA took 
no action on the application for 22 months, he said, other than 
asking him to sign agreements that would have been virtual admissions 
of guilt. Kale said the DEA claimed it had evidence that Kale 
patients had diverted drugs -- that is, sold to others drugs that had 
been prescribed for themselves. Kale said there was no diversion.

In the meantime, Kale was demanding investigations of DEA agents he 
felt had abused him, including the one he said tricked him into 
giving up his DEA registration, Chris Anderson. Because of these 
demands, and his refusal to sign agreements the DEA asked him to 
sign, the agency had a vendetta against him, he said, and that's why 
it held his registration so long after the Medical Board had cleared 
him of all drug charges. Also, the DEA needs to justify its 
existence, and doctors are easy prey, he said.

Kale's patients sprang to his defense, as much as their pain allowed, 
in his confrontation with the Medical Board. Among them were 15 nuns, 
the sisters of St. Scholastica Monastery in Fort Smith, who wrote: 
"We experience Dr. Kale as a compassionate physician who is available 
to relieve those in pain. ... Dr. Kale is a credit to the medical 
profession and the Fort Smith area. ... He has even come to the 
Monastery on Sundays to treat our Sisters."

Another correspondent, who addressed her letter to "Roy Juett," was 
more belligerent: "I understand that you're a doctor of some sort but 
from what I hear and read you don't deserve that address in front of 
your name so I'm going to call you Roy. ... I only hope and pray that 
one day you will suffer from chronic pain and there will be no Pain 
Management Doctors left to help you. I hope you can sleep at night 
knowing all the pain and suffering hundreds of people are going 
through because of you."

The Medical Board's files include one letter from a former Kale 
patient who was less than complimentary: "At one time he had me 
taking 60 mlg. of oxycontin daily ... I was sleeping my life away and 
when I weaned myself down I went 48 hours without urinating and I 
went to the emergency room for help and ended up locked up in a 
de-tox ward. ... After that horrible day, 'Dr.' Kale didn't want to 
see me anymore ..."

That the Medical Board cleared him of any drug charges is a great 
tribute, considering that the board is biased against pain management 
physicians, Kale said.

"Jouett has made his life [performing surgery] on people with back 
pains. He's the medical director for Tyson Foods. He'll tell you that 
none of his patients have pain except the people who are trying to 
get out of work. Pain management physicians came along in the '90s. 
The AMA [American Medical Association] was saying that pain is 
undertreated in this country, and that meds can be used long-term. 
Before, a person in chronic pain just wasn't treated. Pain management 
physicians began to testify that 40 to 60 percent of people who have 
back surgery have pain afterward. They can function only if you treat 
the pain. Suddenly, we're a threat to doctors like Jouett."

The Times sought comment from Jouett. He did not return phone calls. 
A Medical Board employee suggested that a reporter talk to William H. 
Trice III, the board's attorney, rather than Jouett.

(The Medical Board never yields information easily. Dr. Sidney Wolfe, 
director of the health research group of Public Citizen, the consumer 
advocacy group headquartered in Washington, once wrote: "Arkansas' 
medical board seems bound and determined to shield doctors from 
adequate public scrutiny. Patients have to mail requests to the board 
or go to its office in Little Rock to get any information on their 
doctors' histories. That's an unnecessary burden, and it is likely 
that most patients are unaware if their doctors have been 
disciplined." The procedure Wolfe described is still in effect. A 
reporter had to make an appointment several days in advance in order 
to look at the medical board's file on Kale.)

Trice was asked if the board had a policy on pain management 
physicians. "It depends on what you mean by a policy. The board has 
regulations. Some patients need temporary pain treatment. If you're 
going to treat pain for longer than six months, you have to monitor 
the treatment and comply with certain other requirements. Some 
patients choose to abuse the medication. Sometimes a patient's pain 
is relieved, but the treatment is such that the patient is no longer 
functional. That does no good."

Getting his license and his DEA registration back is not enough for 
Dr. Kale. He wants the Medical Board to resign. He's also filed a 
suit against the board in federal court for its alleged mistreatment 
of him. He wants a hearing before the DEA on his complaints against 
DEA agents, and he's filed a federal suit against Chris Anderson, the 
DEA agent he alleges misled him into surrendering his DEA 
registration. A DEA spokesman in Little Rock said that because of 
that lawsuit, the DEA would have no comment on Kale and his allegations.

"My father was a railroad worker with an eighth-grade education," 
Kale said. "For his son to become a doctor was the American dream. 
I'll fight to keep my reputation."

His business is relieving pain, but he hopes to inflict some too.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake