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Pain Doctor Begins Re-Trial for
Prescribing Pain Medication
Thursday, March 29, 2007
On Monday, Dr. William
Hurwitz began a second trial on 50 counts of unlawful prescribing of
opioid pain medication. Prosecutors are seeking to hold him responsible
for the misdeeds of a small number of his patients, some of whom
secretly sold or misused the pills they were prescribed. The government
is charging Dr. Hurwitz as a drug kingpin, though it has never claimed
that Dr. Hurwitz profited from his patients' activities.
In August of last year, the Fourth Circuit Court
of Appeals unanimously reversed Dr. Hurwitz's initial conviction and
25-year sentence because the judge in the 2004 trial had barred the jury
from considering whether the doctor had prescribed the medicines in good
faith, in order to provide what he believed was the best medical care
for his patients.
This case is being watched closely by doctors and
patients who must deal with issues surrounding pain medication. The
government's prosecution of Dr. Hurwitz occurs in the context of a
nationwide law enforcement campaign against the use of powerful
analgesics to treat patients suffering from severe chronic pain. Scores
of resulting physician convictions have seriously chilled the
willingness of many physicians to provide adequate treatment for their
patients, for fear that they could end up as criminal drug defendants.
"It is profoundly disturbing that federal cops and
lawyers have second-guessed the medical judgment of Dr. Hurwitz and the
Virginia Medical Board, and chosen to treat him as a drug dealer instead
of the compassionate physician he is," said Daniel Abrahamson, DPA's
director of legal affairs Drug Detection Time Urine
. Abrahamson continued, "This misguided
prosecution, carried out in the name of the federal war on drugs, has
already ruined one pain expert's career, and will erect even steeper
barriers for millions of Americans who suffer from untreated or
under-treated pain and cannot find effective relief at the hands of
skilled and compassionate doctors. State medical boards, not police and
prosecutors, should regulate medical practice."
In September 2005, DPA filed an amicus
(friend-of-the-court) brief in Dr. Hurwitz’s appeal, signed by leading
pain treatment experts from across the country. The brief sought to
educate the court about the difficulties faced by pain patients seeking
adequate treatment. It corrected common misunderstandings about pain
therapy and explained how the federal government misconstrued both
federal law and accepted standards of medical practice in prosecuting
Dr. Hurwitz.
Dr. Hurwitz’s legal plight is part of an eightfold
increase in physician prosecutions over the past three years. An
estimated 30 percent—or 50 to 75 million Americans—suffer from chronic
pain on a daily basis. As such, untreated pain is considered the
nation's largest health problem and results in more lost days from work
than heart disease and cancer combined.
Dr. Hurwitz’s defense is backed by a large and
prestigious coalition of leading health institutions and practitioners,
including the American Academy of Pain Medicine, the American Pain
Foundation, the National Pain Foundation, the National Foundation for
the Treatment of Pain, and the American Association of Physicians and
Surgeons.
Dr. Hurwitz is being represented pro bono by
attorneys Richard Sauber, of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson,
and Larry Robbins, of Robbins, Russell, Englert, Orseck & Untereiner.
"We have taken on Dr. Hurwitz's defense because of our concern for the
grave legal and social policy ramifications of this misguided
prosecution, and because we believe Dr. Hurwitz was operating as a
physician and not a drug dealer, as the government claims," Mr. Sauber
said.
Drug Detection Time Urine
Information From Always Test Clean.
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