Pubdate: Tue, 19 Nov 2002 Source: Associated Press (Wire) Copyright: 2002 Associated Press Author: Linda A. Johnson DETOX DOCTORS RULED NOT NEGLIGENT TRENTON, N.J. - Two doctors who practiced a method of rapidly detoxifying narcotics addicts were not negligent in the deaths of seven patients, but their licenses should be briefly suspended, a state judge has ruled. Prosecutors had charged Drs. Lance Gooberman and his assistant, David Bradway, with gross and repeated malpractice, negligence, incompetence and professional misconduct. Prosecutors were seeking to revoke their medical licenses. The charges were filed after the deaths of seven of the more than 2,350 heroin and other addicts Gooberman and Bradway treated from May 1995 to September 1999 at U.S. Detox Inc. in Merchantville. The doctors denied any wrongdoing. After a lengthy trial, Administrative Law Judge Jeff S. Masin ruled late Friday that the prosecution had not proved any serious charges, saying the doctors generally acted in good faith. He recommended that each have his license suspended for six months for violations of several medical standards, followed by two years' probation during which their records would be reviewed, particularly if they resumed the rapid detoxification treatments. The violations include inadequate record keeping, in some cases encouraging some patients to allow their cases to be described in publicity materials for the business and not telling early patients that the procedure was considered experimental. Gooberman said Monday he plans to challenge those findings. "I'm really excited about the decision," he said. "It vindicated rapid detoxification. It was important for me to hear that we didn't hurt anybody and we acted in good faith." The state attorney general's office is reviewing Masin's ruling to determine whether to file any exceptions. Masin also recommended that Gooberman pay a total of $11,500 in civil penalties, Bradway pay a total of $14,000 in civil penalties, and they together pay one-third of the costs for investigation of the case by the state Board of Medical Examiners. The board polices doctors licensed in the state and must review Masin's "initial judgment." It can accept his findings, reject them or modify them. In his ruling, Masin wrote that there was nothing intrinsically "inappropriate or especially dangerous" about the doctors' rapid opiate detoxification procedure. It uses medications to rapidly flush drugs out of addicts' bodies while they are under anesthesia for about four hours, getting them over the worst of withdrawal symptoms such as diarrhea, cramps and tremors that normally would last for several days. The method has been widely used in Europe and Israel, but is relatively new in the United States. Doctors in six states offer the treatment. Gooberman and Bradway have been barred from performing the procedure since September 1999. The trial began in January 2001 and continued through June 2002. On the Net: http://lancegooberman.com/ - --- MAP posted-by: Beth