Pubdate: Thu, 21 Feb 2002 Source: Register-Guard, The (OR) Copyright: 2002 The Register-Guard Contact: http://www.registerguard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/362 Author: Tim Christie, The Register-Guard Note: There is an action oriented e-mail discussion list for Oregon which has a sign-up page at http://www.drugsense.org/dpfor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Oregon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) BOARD TARGETS MOLALLA DOCTOR The state Board of Medical Examiners has filed a formal complaint against Oregon's most prolific endorser of medical marijuana applications, alleging he engaged in unprofessional conduct by signing them without first examining patients. The four-page complaint follows the board's unanimous vote last month to discipline Dr. Phillip Leveque, a Molalla osteopath. By his own estimate, he's signed for some 1,800 patients in the last two years - more than 40 percent of all applications signed since the law went into effect in 1999. The board's complaint went to Leveque's attorney last week and was released Wednesday to news media. In an interview, Leveque said he has done nothing wrong and has requested a hearing before an independent hearings officer to contest the charges. "If I don't request a hearing they will automatically revoke my license," he said. "I was doing everything according to the regulations of the (state) medical marijuana office, right down from the word go." The hearings officer will propose discipline to the board, which doesn't have to follow the recommendation. The board could revoke or suspend Leveque's medical license. Short of that, the board could put him on probation, fine him or place restrictions on how he practices medicine. Under the law passed by voters in 1998, patients suffering from a debilitating medical condition are allowed to grow and possess small quantities of marijuana if their doctor certifies that the drug could help their condition. Patients must pay $150 for a medical marijuana card, which is good for one year. In its complaint, the board said Leveque signed medical marijuana applications "without examining the patient, conducting medical tests, maintaining an adequate medical chart, reviewing possible contraindications or conferring with other medical care providers." The complaint cites three examples of Leveque practicing medicine "below the standard of care" that Oregon doctors are required to meet. Two of the examples involve patients that Leveque never met or examined, but approved for the program. The third example quotes a letter Leveque sent to the Oregon Health Division after it changed the rules to require doctors to conduct physical exams of patients they approved: "I don't believe ANY physical exam would detect and diagnose or confirm diagnosis of any" of the conditions that qualify patients for the cards. Those conditions include cancer, glaucoma, HIV/AIDS, severe pain, severe nausea, or epilepsy. The state board's complaint says, "This statement, which is consistent with his failure to conduct a physical examination for his patients, displays a lack of medical knowledge and regard for the well-being of his patients." Leveque said a specialist's expertise is needed to confirm the conditions, and that he relied on previous doctors' medical charts and, in some cases, on prescription drug vials patients brought to him. Until the state changed the rules last summer, the medical marijuana law didn't require doctors to do the physical exams, he said. After changing the rules, state health officials gave Leveque's patients 90 days to reapply for medical marijuana cards. Leveque then conducted clinics all over the state, working six days a week to do about 450 exams in 90 days. But he didn't get to everybody, and state officials in January sent rejection letters to 300 cardholders who didn't reapply. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens