#ACIInsurance
ACI’s National Advanced Forum on Medical Professional Liability
Cathleen Kelly Rebar
Partner
Stewart Bernstiel Rebar & Smith
NEW CLAIMS TRENDS RELATED TO THE U.S. PAIN CRISIS:
Taking a Look at the Recent Prescription Drug Abuse Epidemic and Its Potential Impact on the Tide of Med Mal Insurance Claims
John M. Foley
Manager, Claims
Markel
Victoria L. Vance
Health Care Chair
Tucker Ellis LLP
October 30-31, 2014
Tweeting about this conference?
#ACIInsurance
The Dilemma Standard for treatment =
Adequate pain control is a fundamental right of every patient.
So what’s the problem?
Balancing treatment for pain control without feeding addition.
Risk = too little or too much pain medication.
Either spectrum can lead to litigation.
#ACIInsurance
The Problem
The prescription drug epidemic.
The number of prescription drug related deaths has increased every year for the past 15 years.
Prescription pain killers have similar addictive properties to heroin.
#ACIInsurance
The Cost
Over half a trillion dollars are spent on expenses associated with medical, economic, social and the criminal impact caused by misuse of pain medication.
Immeasurable indirect costs including drug related crimes, doctor shopping, loss of productivity and wages, increasing unemployment, and law enforcement expenses fighting the war.
#ACIInsurance
Two Spectrums for Exposure
Under Prescribing /failing to properly manage the pain
Over Prescribing /illegitimate prescribing
#ACIInsurance
The Penalty All four domains of the law have seen
litigation for pain management errors:
Administrative
Civil
Criminal
Constitutional
Most common is administrative/licensing
#ACIInsurance
The way things were . . .
Opiophobia Belief of public, prescribers and medical boards
that opioid analgesics were reserved for only the sickest and terminally ill.
Prior to 1999 there are no records of any physician ever being disciplined for under-prescribing/failing to adequately manage patient’s pain.
However, the records are plentiful concerning actions for over-prescribing.
#ACIInsurance
To Prescribe or Not to Prescribe . . .
#ACIInsurance
Over-Prescribing Hoover v. Agency for Healthcare
Administration
Florida medical licensing board brought action against Katherine Hoover, M.D. for prescription of opiates to manage pain of noncancer patients. Sanctions were issued, and then overturned.
There are hundreds of Dr. Hoovers and examples just like this.
#ACIInsurance
Over-Prescribing/Criminal 1994 – Kansas Attorney General
Brought on charges of attempted murder against Stanley Naramore, M.D., a small-town physician . He was convicted.
Two patients who were terminally ill and within days of death were allegedly overprescribed pain medication designed to “ease the patient’s comfort.”
The evidence indicated that the doses would have resulted in respiratory failure almost immediately. Dr. Naramore came off the case. Patient was transferred and died two days later of her disease.
Significantly, the verdict was overturned on appeal as against the weight of the evidence because the burden of proof was beyond a reasonable doubt.
#ACIInsurance
Typical Criminal Over-Prescribing
Physician targets = physicians servicing a large group of noncancer patients for treatment of
chronic pain. William Hurwitz, M.D. serviced patients with
“chronic pain” from 36 states. He was convicted on 50 counts of drug trafficking, later reduced to 16 counts on appeal. He served 57 months in prison.
Critical issue – Dr. Hurwitz knew or should have known in the exercise of sound clinical judgment that he was prescribing to addicts.
#ACIInsurance
Common Liability Themes
Consider alternative non-opioid therapies
Warn patients, get proper informed consent
Properly titrate initial and ongoing doses
Get adequate substance abuse and mental health history
Recognize signs of patient addiction, dependence, abuse
Consider drug-to-drug interactions
#ACIInsurance
Common Liability Themes
Failure to (cont.):
Monitor patient for signs and symptoms of prescribed therapy vs. abuse
Coordinate care with other prescribers
Refer patient to specialists (Pain Mgmt., Addiction, Psych)
Train and Supervise clinic/office staff
Document, document, document!
#ACIInsurance
Liabilities to Third Parties
Additional theory = physician liability for harm to third persons.
Massachusetts, Utah, New Hampshire and Georgia have all found liability for a prescribing physician for resulting harm to third persons. Duty was owed to people foreseeably put at risk by doctors’ failure to warn about the effects of a provided treatment.
Connecticut has held the opposite.
#ACIInsurance
New theories of Liability/ Over-Prescribing Drug Manufacturer Liability:
Two California counties and the city of Chicago sued 5 of the largest drug manufacturers for causing the nation’s drug epidemic through a “campaign of deception” aimed at boosting sales of prescription pain meds like OxyContin.
The litigation is based on violations of the states’ false advertising, unfair business practices and public nuisance laws.
In the complaints, the counties cite the epidemic of prescription pain killer abuse and the ties to increased deaths and overdoses from those and other drugs.
One focus of the suit is the misleading claims by manufacturers to prescribers that the benefits of these drugs outweigh the risks.
#ACIInsurance
New theories of Criminal Liability/Over-Prescribing Fed-Ex and UPS face
criminal charges for delivering controlled substances to internet pharmacies with knowledge the drugs were being dispensed to drug addicts.
Walgreen faced criminal charges for diverting OxyContin from a Florida
store.
#ACIInsurance
What about under-prescribing?
In 1999
Oregon was the first state to discipline a doctor for failing to adequately manage his patients’ pain by under-prescribing to six terminally ill cancer patients. The sanctions were 10 years probation, a formal reprimand and mandatory training. Two years later he was sanctioned for the same conduct.
Prior to 1990
There were no reported civil actions based solely on inadequate pain management through medication.
#ACIInsurance
Under Prescribing/Groundbreaking
1991 North Carolina –
An SNF was found liable for millions of dollars in compensatory damages and punitive damages after a nurse intentionally withheld pain medications from a patient dying of metastatic prostrate cancer.
2001 California (ten years later) – A California jury found a physician civilly liable for millions of
dollars for failing to manage the pain of a lung cancer patient just days from death. The jury was one vote shy of a punitive damages award. The theory was elder abuse and the standard was gross departure from standard of care.
The California licensing board’s failure to find actionable conduct by the physician was the motivating factor to the family to bring suit.
#ACIInsurance
The Reality
Two significant issues with prescription pain medication, both creating a double-edged sword for prescribers.
#ACIInsurance
Duped, Dealer, Dense, Dependent? Medication over or under
prescribing generally due to one of four reasons:
Doctor was duped by Patient
Doctor is intentional diverting drugs (Dealer)
Doctor lacks proper education to recognize legitimate pain need (Dense)
Doctor is drug-dependent himself
#ACIInsurance
Exposed Classes of Insureds
Pharmacists who fill pain prescriptions without question
Pharmacists who refuse to fill pain prescriptions
Pain management/anesthesiology
Locum tenens – entire spectrum
Physician assistants
Others who “should have known”
#ACIInsurance
Really Bad Behavior Patient 1
Rx 247,980 Oxycodone tablets prescribed over a 13 month period;
Patient RX 7,200 30-milligram tablets = 3,600 tablets per day
Average Rx as 250 tablets per day
Patient 2
Lollipop abuse. RX thousands of doses of Actiq over several months
Co-pay = $55, cost to insurance as nearly $16,000
33 lollipops per day to a non-cancer patient
Pharmacy received $163,000 for Rx
#ACIInsurance
Pharmacist Duty
Quasi-medical duty to verify necessity and propriety of Rx.
Texas v. individual pharmacist for death of 38 year old man from excessive Carisoprodol, Hydrocodone and Xanax Rx.
120 Rx of Hyrodocodone and Carisoprodol filled on 12/1/07
Died on 12/3/07
Basis of the suit was pharmacy owed duty to verify “valid medical purpose.”
Pharmacies have not been held liable to third-parties but Florida and Nevada have come close.
#ACIInsurance
How can Pharmacists avoid Liability?
Obvious answer = verify that RX is for “valid medical purpose”.
Every action has consequences: Physician threatened to sue Pharmacy for defamation
for refusing to honor Rx he had written patient.
Pharmacy had also advised other pharmacies of his suspicion that the RX were not for a “valid medical purpose”.
#ACIInsurance
To Write or Not To Write? Yes or No?
Example 1: 23 y/o unemployed patient is prescribed Oxycontin, Oxycodone and Alprazolam and dies 3 days after the Insured’s physician assistant renewed his prescriptions.
Yes or No? Example 2: 40 y/o
correction officer is prescribed Xanax for anxiety, Trazadone for sleep, and Fentanyl for pain relief by the Insured’s locum tenens family practice physician for a work injury, and dies in his sleep.
#ACIInsurance
To Write or Not To Write?
Example 1: 23 y/o unemployed patient is prescribed Oxycontin, Oxycodone and Alprazolam and dies 3 days after the Insured physician assistant renewed his prescriptions.
Patient was in an auto accident two years prior, evaluated by orthopedic surgeon for spinal issues, and underwent ineffective epidural steroid injections. Physician’s assistant saw patient at least monthly for over one year, performed drug screens to assure no abuse of non-prescribed substances and ordered follow-up MRI’s.
Yes or No?
#ACIInsurance
To Write or Not to Write?
Yes or No? Example 2: 40 y/o correctional officer is prescribed
Xanax for anxiety, Trazadone for sleep, and Fentanyl for pain relief by the Insured’s locum tenens family practice physician for a work injury, and dies in his sleep.
Cause of death from Fentanyl intoxication only, no other drugs in system at death. Patient was cutting Fentanyl patches into smaller pieces, which he then froze and chewed/sucked, resulting in lethal dose.
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Populations
Elderly Patients Both Outpatient and in
NH/AL settings
Slower metabolism to clear drugs
Increased risk of drug-to-drug interactions
Impairments of kidney/liver systems
Unsuspected risk of abuse/diversion/addiction
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Populations
Pre-Teens/Adolescents Find Rx drugs at home “must be OK”
High incidence of teens using Rx drug w/o MD script (narcotics, multiple drugs, unknown drugs)
Majority obtain drugs from friends/family
When opioids run out, they turn to heroin (cheaper, readily available)
Result: Heroin addiction skyrocketing!
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Populations
“Soccer Moms”
Increase in death from prescription painkiller ODs (1999 – 2009): ● Men 265% ● Women 400%
Under-recognized; growing problem for women
Women (25-54 yo): more likely to go to ED for Rx painkiller misuse/abuse
Women (45-54 yo): highest risk of dying from Rx painkiller OD
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Populations
“Soccer Moms”/Women are more
likely to:
have chronic pain
be prescribed painkillers
be given higher doses
use them for longer periods of time
become dependent more quickly
engage in doctor shopping
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Settings “Methadone Prescriptions”
Historically – a safe and effective treatment for addiction
Recently – low cost generic drug provides long-lasting pain relief
Reality – 6-fold increase in methadone OD deaths 1999 - 2009
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Settings Methadone Risk Profile
Narrow therapeutic range
Prescribe within the recommended ranges; take care when titrating
Can accumulate in body leading to respiratory depression
Can disrupt cardiac rhythm
Other meds can potentiate the effects of methadone
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Settings Drug Treatment Centers
Many use outdated treatment methods; not evidence-based
Personnel lack qualifications and training
Too many offer only revolving door, celebrity, “get fixed quick” approach
Reality:
Patients need multi-faceted, continuous, individualized treatment programs
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Settings: Drug Treatment Centers
Liability Claims:
Self-destructive behavior
Assaults (by staff; by patients)
Infections, falls, injuries
Exceptional withdrawal symptoms
Failure to recognize/diagnose/address underlying medical problems
#ACIInsurance
Claims Involving Special Settings Drug Treatment Centers
Look For:
Licensed addiction counselors
Individualized treatment programs
Able to address underlying medical, psychological, social, and legal problems
Offer medical and support services
Offer validated treatment methods:
Community Reinforcement And Family Training (CRAFT)
#ACIInsurance
State Government Response Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs)
Prescribing Guidelines—80 mg. Morphine Equivalency Dosing (MED) threshold; “press pause” to re-evaluate risks/benefits of LT opioid therapy
Pain Clinic (“Pill Mill”) crackdown
In office physician dispensing limits
Medicaid & BWC “lock-in” programs to limit who can prescribe and who can dispense to the patient
#ACIInsurance
Federal Government Response: FDA
New! April 16, 2014-class-wide labeling changes for all extended-release and long-acting (ER/LA)opioids Restricted Indication for Use: severe, round-the-
clock pain; reserved for patients who have failed non-opioid alternatives
NOT indicated for PRN pain relief
Black Box Warning: chronic maternal use during pregnancy can cause Neonatal Opioid Withdrawl Syndrome (NOWS)
#ACIInsurance
Federal Government Response: FDA
REMS—drug sponsor (manufacturer) to provide:
Educational programs for safe prescribing for clinicians;
Medication Guides and Drug counseling documents for patients
#ACIInsurance
Medicare (CMS)
“Protecting the Integrity of Medicare Act of 2014” discussion draft bill
§17 Programs to Prevent Prescription Drug Abuse Under Medicare Part D
High-risk beneficiaries can be “locked in” to one physician and one pharmacy for opioids and high-risk drugs
States can share information across state lines
Medicare Drug Integrity Contractors (MEDICs) will monitor prescribers and beneficiaries for frequently abused drugs
#ACIInsurance
Risk Management - Best Practices: Care of Patients
Obtain a thorough and accurate H&P
Use validated screening tools to identify at-risk patients
Recognize the “Red Flags” for abuse
Refill practices: require office visits and regular exams to justify refills
Perform Urine Drug Screens (UDS) at outset of care, when meds are adjusted, and on a random basis
#ACIInsurance
Risk Management - Best Practices: Care of Patients
Utilize tracking and monitoring databases (PDMD)
Include Psychologists and Behavioral Health Specialists as adjuncts to Rx therapy
Give clear instructions for use
Avoid risky drug combinations (i.e., Opioids and Benzodiazepines)
Female Patients: Discuss R/B/A for Rx painkillers, especially during pregnancy
#ACIInsurance
Risk Management - Best Practices: Documentation
Thoroughly document all encounters and rationale for prescribing decisions
“Informed Consent”: signed, reviewed, specific
Use Patient Opioid Contracts to set ground rules for treatment, and provide basis for termination
Provide Education materials to patient and family
#ACIInsurance
Risk Management - Best Practices: Training & Education
Understand the link between substance abuse and mental health
Take CME courses for Opioid Prescribing (AMA Module Series)
Review all new product labeling and educational materials
Talk to pharmacists, colleagues, consultants on complex cases
#ACIInsurance
QUESTIONS? Cathleen Kelly Rebar Partner STEWART BERNSTIEL REBAR & SMITH [email protected] John M. Foley Manager, Claims MARKEL CORPORATION [email protected] Victoria L. Vance Health Care Chair TUCKER ELLIS LLP [email protected]