Pharmacists denied service to embattled Rosalia nurse
| By Kip Hill, The Spokesman-Review, Spokane, Wash. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
"It seemed to me they thought I didn't know what I was doing,"
A state panel stripped her of her credentials and charged her with unprofessional conduct
Bowen-Small had been licensed as a health care provider with
Responding to the accusations she prescribed painkiller dosages exceeding in some cases 15 times the amount of opiates that require a specialist consultation, Bowen-Small said the state
"I would tell everyone when they come in, 'I am not a pain doctor. I am a primary care provider doctor,'" Bowen-Small said. "And in that, I want you to get better, to take care of yourself."
In her response to allegations that she didn't craft pain-management contracts with many patients, as required by state law, Bowen-Small said, "sometimes my documentation was crappy."
Almost all of her patients were on
"One of my patients that died, I asked him how often he was taking his insulin," she said. "And he admitted to me, probably half of the time."
The state says the patients, who are not named in charging documents, all died from January to
Shortly after the final investigated death, some
"I do not know how to get expensive drugs and treatments paid for by (the state
The federal
"What usually happens is the pharmacist says, 'We're not going to fill that prescription,'" he said. Pharmacists are looking out for signs of prescription abuse, including what are termed in the industry "three-baggers" and "home runs," when the same combination of three or four powerful painkillers are prescribed to patients regardless of other circumstances.
The
She said she received a text message from a former patient saying at least one of the rash of
"Many of the patients who get these prescriptions don't really take the drugs," he said.
Bowen-Small has a little less than two weeks to formally respond to the charges against her. She said this week she has not hired a lawyer, but that's probably in her future. In the meantime, many of her low-income patients are left dealing with insurance companies and doctors who will likely refuse them care, she said.
"They're saying, take them off their pain meds, but they're not going to give them anything else," Bowen-Small said. "Is that fair? Is that nice? Do we as a society just say, 'Too bad, you poor people?'"
___
(c)2014 The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.)
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