Pubdate: Wed, 24 Jul 2002 Source: Daily Independent, The (KY) Copyright: 2002 The Daily Independent, Inc. Contact: http://www.dailyindependent.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1573 Author: Ben Fields PATIENTS STRUGGLE TO FIND NEW CARE Some Say Doctor's Arrest Leads to Unfair Stereotyping Longtime patients of a South Point doctor arrested last month on drug charges are saying they have had trouble finding new medical care. The FBI arrested Randall McCollister, who had a practice in Ironton, and former patient Lawrence D. Jenkins on June 21 for allegedly conspiring to fraudulently obtain and illegally distribute prescription drugs, including OxyContin. The arrest led to the shutdown of McCollister's office, and initially left patients with no way to obtain medical records - essential in obtaining another doctor. McCollister's arrest comes at a time when several arrests and indictments have been made for similar offenses in the area, including a number of doctors in South Shore. Some of those doctor's patients have also complained of having problems finding new doctors, though law enforcement officials have said the majority, but not all, of the patients who went to South Shore did so strictly for the controlled substances they could obtain. Many traveled more than 100 miles. In McCollister's practice, some of the patients were local residents who had been coming to the doctor for years for various medical conditions. Blake Sypher, director of biomedical ethics education at Marshall University, said he has seen similar situations in recent years. "These people who are getting arrested aren't all running fly-by-night offices," Sypher said. "Some have had thriving, seemingly reputable practices." McCollister's office recently reopened so patients can get their records, but going nearly a month without being able to obtain them was frustrating, patients said. "The sign on the office said it was closed until further notice, and no one was answering the phone," said Charolette Risner, a 53-year-old Flatwoods resident . Both Risner and her husband, Rocky, a former Kentucky Electric Steel worker, had been patients of McCollister's since he was a doctor at Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital. "We had no way of getting our records, and no one would see us without them," she said. Ashland resident Robert Castle, 56, another longtime patient of McCollister's, said he had to scrape together what records he could from McCollister's time at OLBH in order to get another doctor to see him. McCollister voluntarily resigned from the hospital in 1996, a hospital official said. Castle says he's on several maintenance drugs, some of which are controlled substances, for a heart condition, and is having to ration his medicine until his appointment with a new physician in August. Jane Powell, an office employee of McCollister's, said she and other staff didn't know what to do when the doctor was arrested. "We got some legal advice, and decided to open up the office so people could get in here and get their records," Powell said Thursday. Even if patients have their records, it doesn't mean they will get to see another doctor, they claim. Some longtime patients say they've encountered prejudice at other doctor's offices because of their former physician's alleged criminal entanglements. "They think everyone who went over there (McCollister's office) are drug addicts," Risner said. Another patient, who asked not to be named, said he and his wife had been seeing McCollister for seven years, and said he also has encountered resistance because of his former physician. "We didn't know any of that stuff was going on, and now we're being treated like junkies," he said. "No one will take us." Castle said he was advised by one practice to "find another doctor" when he mentioned his previous physician's name. Doctors are not under any legal obligation to take new patients, Sypher said, and some offices the patients are calling might merely be full. He said he has never seen a situation where patients have struggled to find health care after losing a physician. "It's unfair to stigmatize someone because of who their doctor is," he said. "A physician's practice should be set up appropriately to distinguish between drug-seekers and patients who have been left in a lurch." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex