Pubdate: Thu, 18 Apr 2002 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2002 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: Cristina C. Breen DOCTOR WILL FIND OUT TODAY WHETHER HE KEEPS LICENSE GROVER - April Danner is sick of the stigma that comes with being a "Talley patient." Dr. Joseph Talley, 64, is the Cleveland County doctor who could lose his medical license today for improperly prescribing narcotics, failing to property examine or monitor some patients to weed out abuse, and failing to check whether some with drug-abuse histories were getting drugs elsewhere. Danner, 26, who has only 10 days left in her supply of morphine-like Fentenyl patches to control pain from endometriosis and degenerative disc disease, says she's been getting frosty responses -- and even hang-ups -- from doctors' offices when she tells them Talley was her doctor. "I'm extremely proud to be labeled as one of Dr. Talley's patients," said Danner, of Hickory, who had been his patient for about a year. "But it aggravates me that we're all labeled as drug addicts just looking for a high. I don't abuse my medication. I don't get high off my medication." The decision on whether to revoke Talley's medical license will be made in Raleigh today by the 12-member N.C. Medical Board, which brought the charges against him in October and ruled against him after a three-day hearing last month. The penalty could range from revoking his license to a procedural slap on the wrist. Talley said he expects to lose his medical license. He has been practicing since 1963. Talley acknowledged prescribing large amounts of narcotics, but defended his treatment choices as reasonable. He produced letters written by board investigators in previous years in which they told board members his treatment methods were sound, and said he was never told until charges were filed last fall to change his treatment methods. "I feel guilty. If it hadn't been for him trying to help me and just help these people, then this wouldn't have happened," Danner said. "Now he's going to lose everything he's worked his life to build. And he's at an age when he should retire." His license to prescribe narcotics has already been pulled in a separate action by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Since the DEA action in February, his two partners have left and his office has been quiet. Instead of seeing patients for up to 10 hours straight -- as was his norm -- he spends hours on the phone with other doctors, begging them to take his patients and continue the drug therapies. Some doctors accept his patients on the condition that neither Talley nor the patient tell anyone. Others have agreed to accept a fixed number of Talley patients, for fear of getting overloaded. One of Talley's most vehement supporters, Jaye Whitmire of Conover, said he gets up to a dozen calls a day from Talley patients, some frantic. "We've had people threatening suicide, people telling me that they're going to buy drugs off the street because the pain is so bad. If they've got to have it, they've got to have it," he said. "What I've told some of them is just to go down the phone book and start calling (doctors)." In Talley's office, three workers whom Talley calls "the girls" sort through 26 boxes of patient files stacked in the clinic waiting room. DEA agents returned the boxes last week in a Ryder truck, minus records of cases still under criminal investigation. The files were seized in December. Carol Boyd, a phlebotomist who has worked for Talley since June, said she's decided to keep working for him. "I told him I won't leave him till it's over. I'll stick with him till the end," Boyd said. "I see what he's like with his patients. He's always got time for you, no matter how tired he is, or what time it is." - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel