News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: Medicinal Pot Is Doctor's Specialty |
Title: | US OR: Medicinal Pot Is Doctor's Specialty |
Published On: | 2001-09-04 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-31 19:01:51 |
MEDICINAL POT IS DOCTOR'S SPECIALTY
Health: Physician Has OKd Marijuana For 1,000 Patients--40% Of The State
Total, Attracting Official Scrutiny.
PORTLAND, Ore. -- Dr. Phillip Leveque feels his patients' pain. Ten years
ago, an accidental overdose of spinal anesthetic left his feet and tailbone
with a burning sensation. He's also been in three bad auto accidents.
Leveque tried painkillers, but they didn't work. So he simply lives with
it, stoking up on sleeping pills at night. But for patients with chronic
pain, Leveque offers another alternative: marijuana. Well more than 1,000
patients have gotten authorization from the 77-year-old osteopath to use
the drug under Oregon's 2-year-old medical marijuana law. That's 40% of all
authorizations in the state and eight times more than any other doctor.
State health authorities would like to know why, and they have launched a
controversial inquiry into Leveque's patient records.
The answer, Leveque said, is simple:
"When you step down on your foot, you feel pressure. When I step, I feel
fire. . . . I know exactly what [people who get medical marijuana cards]
are going through."
Oregon's inquiry has raised troubling questions about doctor-patient
confidentiality in a state that, unlike California, maintains a central
registry of all medical marijuana patients and the doctors who oversee them.
Under temporary regulations issued in response to Leveque's hefty client
base, new medical marijuana patients in Oregon--including more than 800 who
have pending applications for access to the drug signed by the Molalla,
Ore., doctor--will have to allow authorities to review their records or
face automatic denial.
Leveque's supporters say that the state is placing roadblocks in the way of
a doctor who has been the only resource for many patients turned away by
physicians leery of dealing with marijuana cases.
Since Oregon in 1998 became one of nine states with laws allowing patients
to use small amounts of marijuana for medicinal purposes, Leveque has run
makeshift clinics in towns all over the state. He's also offered telephone
and mail consultations to patients in areas too remote for a personal visit.
"My name has spread through the jungle telegraph: people who know people
who know people," Leveque said. "I have physicians [as patients]. I had a
phone call from a dentist who wants to get a marijuana card. Lots of
nurses. Lots of doctors' wives. . . . I must have about 30 ladies with PMS
[premenstrual syndrome] that have cards."
Leveque is so popular that state officials have trouble believing he has
the time to act as an actual attending physician on so many cases.
"To qualify for a card, you have to have a debilitating medical condition
and you have to have an [attending] physician provide a written statement
that says . . . you might benefit from the use of medical marijuana," said
Grant Higginson, Oregon's public health officer.
When officials moved last month to scrutinize Leveque's patient records,
they were met with stiff opposition from the Oregon Medical Assn. "Our
position is, nobody examines a patient's medical chart, by rule or
otherwise, without the patient's consent or a court order," said Robert
Dernedde, executive director of the physicians' group.
So temporary rules were adopted this summer requiring patients seeking a
medical marijuana card, which grants them access to the drug, to agree to
have their records reviewed by the state. That alleviated the medical
association's concerns but not those of medical marijuana advocates who say
the rules still are too intrusive and unwieldy.
"It is going to . . . create more burden on these patients. They are sick
and suffering, and it's basically unnecessary," said John Sajo, who heads
Voter Power, the citizens group that backed Oregon's marijuana ballot
initiative.
"We pretty much think this is a witch hunt. . . . They don't have a single
complaint from a patient, or a single patient who's been harmed or had an
adverse impact on their health from Dr. Leveque qualifying them for medical
marijuana," Sajo said.
The state Board of Medical Examiners is conducting a separate inquiry into
an allegation that Leveque authorized a medical marijuana card without
adequate examination, consultation and follow-up. In one case, Leveque
allegedly signed for a patient with a previous history of drug abuse. The
osteopath was placed on licensing probation for 10 years in 1986 for
allegedly overprescribing pain medications to patients.
To Leveque, the controversies come from a medical establishment unequipped
to deal with the ravages of chronic pain and unrealistic about the medical
conditions that give rise to marijuana use under the Oregon law.
Almost none of the conditions for which marijuana is authorized in
Oregon--cancer, glaucoma, AIDS, Alzheimer's disease, wasting, severe pain
or nausea, seizures and persistent muscle spasms--can be detected with a
simple physician examination, he said.
Instead, Leveque requires patients to give him a copy of their diagnosis
from another physician, and he makes detailed inquiries about their
experiences with other medications.
"I have patients that live nine hours from Portland, 10 hours," Leveque
said. "These people are going to have to endure a nine-hour drive both ways
to see me."
Leveque has received as many as 40 new requests a day from potential
patients since last month, when his name hit the Oregon newspapers. "The
important part of this story is not that Dr. Leveque has signed [hundreds
of] applications but that there are 7,000 physicians in Oregon who haven't
signed one," Leveque said.
As in California and other states with medical marijuana laws, many doctors
fear the prospect of Drug Enforcement Administration action, since federal
law considers marijuana an illegal drug. The Board of Medical Examiners'
investigation into Leveque has made other doctors even more reluctant, Sajo
said.
Higginson said more than 500 physicians in Oregon have provided
authorizations for marijuana cards. "On the other hand . . . that's one of
the most common questions we get asked: 'Can you tell me where we can get a
physician who's willing to do this.' In some cases, the doctors of a whole
community--or even a whole county--aren't willing to do it."
Under the temporary rules, which will be reviewed in public hearings this
fall, the state has set minimum standards for qualified attending
physicians. They must review medical records, conduct a physical exam,
develop a treatment plan and provide follow-up care that is documented in
an ongoing patient file.
"If [Leveque] is doing this strictly over the phone, then I don't think he
would qualify," Higginson said.
Sajo said he thinks most physicians, including Leveque, will be able to
meet the standards. Litigation over the rules "seems quite inevitable," he
said, with the American Civil Liberties Union looking at the issue now.
Charles Brookman, a 54-year-old former Green Beret from Salem, Ore., said
Leveque signed his marijuana authorization to ease the crippling pain he
suffers as a result of Vietnam War injuries and multiple sclerosis, which
also has left him blind.
"The big thing about Dr. Leveque is he really goes out of his way to help
veterans," he said. (Leveque is a World War II infantry veteran.) "A vet
will go to the VA hospital where they're getting their primary treatment,
and there's no doctor there that will sign the application form. I went to
12 doctors before I found one that would sign, and that was Dr. Leveque."
Health: Physician Has OKd Marijuana For 1,000 Patients--40% Of The State
Total, Attracting Official Scrutiny.
PORTLAND, Ore. -- Dr. Phillip Leveque feels his patients' pain. Ten years
ago, an accidental overdose of spinal anesthetic left his feet and tailbone
with a burning sensation. He's also been in three bad auto accidents.
Leveque tried painkillers, but they didn't work. So he simply lives with
it, stoking up on sleeping pills at night. But for patients with chronic
pain, Leveque offers another alternative: marijuana. Well more than 1,000
patients have gotten authorization from the 77-year-old osteopath to use
the drug under Oregon's 2-year-old medical marijuana law. That's 40% of all
authorizations in the state and eight times more than any other doctor.
State health authorities would like to know why, and they have launched a
controversial inquiry into Leveque's patient records.
The answer, Leveque said, is simple:
"When you step down on your foot, you feel pressure. When I step, I feel
fire. . . . I know exactly what [people who get medical marijuana cards]
are going through."
Oregon's inquiry has raised troubling questions about doctor-patient
confidentiality in a state that, unlike California, maintains a central
registry of all medical marijuana patients and the doctors who oversee them.
Under temporary regulations issued in response to Leveque's hefty client
base, new medical marijuana patients in Oregon--including more than 800 who
have pending applications for access to the drug signed by the Molalla,
Ore., doctor--will have to allow authorities to review their records or
face automatic denial.
Leveque's supporters say that the state is placing roadblocks in the way of
a doctor who has been the only resource for many patients turned away by
physicians leery of dealing with marijuana cases.
Since Oregon in 1998 became one of nine states with laws allowing patients
to use small amounts of marijuana for medicinal purposes, Leveque has run
makeshift clinics in towns all over the state. He's also offered telephone
and mail consultations to patients in areas too remote for a personal visit.
"My name has spread through the jungle telegraph: people who know people
who know people," Leveque said. "I have physicians [as patients]. I had a
phone call from a dentist who wants to get a marijuana card. Lots of
nurses. Lots of doctors' wives. . . . I must have about 30 ladies with PMS
[premenstrual syndrome] that have cards."
Leveque is so popular that state officials have trouble believing he has
the time to act as an actual attending physician on so many cases.
"To qualify for a card, you have to have a debilitating medical condition
and you have to have an [attending] physician provide a written statement
that says . . . you might benefit from the use of medical marijuana," said
Grant Higginson, Oregon's public health officer.
When officials moved last month to scrutinize Leveque's patient records,
they were met with stiff opposition from the Oregon Medical Assn. "Our
position is, nobody examines a patient's medical chart, by rule or
otherwise, without the patient's consent or a court order," said Robert
Dernedde, executive director of the physicians' group.
So temporary rules were adopted this summer requiring patients seeking a
medical marijuana card, which grants them access to the drug, to agree to
have their records reviewed by the state. That alleviated the medical
association's concerns but not those of medical marijuana advocates who say
the rules still are too intrusive and unwieldy.
"It is going to . . . create more burden on these patients. They are sick
and suffering, and it's basically unnecessary," said John Sajo, who heads
Voter Power, the citizens group that backed Oregon's marijuana ballot
initiative.
"We pretty much think this is a witch hunt. . . . They don't have a single
complaint from a patient, or a single patient who's been harmed or had an
adverse impact on their health from Dr. Leveque qualifying them for medical
marijuana," Sajo said.
The state Board of Medical Examiners is conducting a separate inquiry into
an allegation that Leveque authorized a medical marijuana card without
adequate examination, consultation and follow-up. In one case, Leveque
allegedly signed for a patient with a previous history of drug abuse. The
osteopath was placed on licensing probation for 10 years in 1986 for
allegedly overprescribing pain medications to patients.
To Leveque, the controversies come from a medical establishment unequipped
to deal with the ravages of chronic pain and unrealistic about the medical
conditions that give rise to marijuana use under the Oregon law.
Almost none of the conditions for which marijuana is authorized in
Oregon--cancer, glaucoma, AIDS, Alzheimer's disease, wasting, severe pain
or nausea, seizures and persistent muscle spasms--can be detected with a
simple physician examination, he said.
Instead, Leveque requires patients to give him a copy of their diagnosis
from another physician, and he makes detailed inquiries about their
experiences with other medications.
"I have patients that live nine hours from Portland, 10 hours," Leveque
said. "These people are going to have to endure a nine-hour drive both ways
to see me."
Leveque has received as many as 40 new requests a day from potential
patients since last month, when his name hit the Oregon newspapers. "The
important part of this story is not that Dr. Leveque has signed [hundreds
of] applications but that there are 7,000 physicians in Oregon who haven't
signed one," Leveque said.
As in California and other states with medical marijuana laws, many doctors
fear the prospect of Drug Enforcement Administration action, since federal
law considers marijuana an illegal drug. The Board of Medical Examiners'
investigation into Leveque has made other doctors even more reluctant, Sajo
said.
Higginson said more than 500 physicians in Oregon have provided
authorizations for marijuana cards. "On the other hand . . . that's one of
the most common questions we get asked: 'Can you tell me where we can get a
physician who's willing to do this.' In some cases, the doctors of a whole
community--or even a whole county--aren't willing to do it."
Under the temporary rules, which will be reviewed in public hearings this
fall, the state has set minimum standards for qualified attending
physicians. They must review medical records, conduct a physical exam,
develop a treatment plan and provide follow-up care that is documented in
an ongoing patient file.
"If [Leveque] is doing this strictly over the phone, then I don't think he
would qualify," Higginson said.
Sajo said he thinks most physicians, including Leveque, will be able to
meet the standards. Litigation over the rules "seems quite inevitable," he
said, with the American Civil Liberties Union looking at the issue now.
Charles Brookman, a 54-year-old former Green Beret from Salem, Ore., said
Leveque signed his marijuana authorization to ease the crippling pain he
suffers as a result of Vietnam War injuries and multiple sclerosis, which
also has left him blind.
"The big thing about Dr. Leveque is he really goes out of his way to help
veterans," he said. (Leveque is a World War II infantry veteran.) "A vet
will go to the VA hospital where they're getting their primary treatment,
and there's no doctor there that will sign the application form. I went to
12 doctors before I found one that would sign, and that was Dr. Leveque."
Member Comments |
No member comments available...