Pubdate: Fri, 10 Oct 2003 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2003 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: John Pope PAIN DOCTOR'S LICENSE SUSPENDED BY LA. BOARD Action Taken After Probe Into 2 Deaths Based on its investigation into the deaths of two patients, the state medical licensing board has suspended for three years the license of a New Orleans-area doctor who treated chronic pain. In suspending the license of Dr. David Michael Jarrott, the Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners said, "The outcomes for two of his patients might have been different" had he followed standard rules for treating and monitoring them. One of the two, whom the report describes as an addict, died of an overdose. The other patient died of a combination of factors, including respiratory failure and chemical abuse, according to the report. State rules require that prescriptions be scrupulously documented because narcotics frequently are dispensed to people suffering from chronic pain. "Dr. Jarrott's charts are nothing more than a superficial attempt to create the appearance that he is in compliance with the rules," the board wrote in a 20-page report. In treating those patients, the board said, Jarrott prescribed narcotics liberally but failed to take precautions such as keeping track of what he had prescribed and how the patients were affected, taking detailed histories of their drug use, and checking to see whether they were getting narcotics elsewhere. The St. Tammany Parish Sheriff's Office is investigating the cases, spokesman James Hartman said. Jarrott, 57, has offices in Covington and in New Orleans' Mid-City neighborhood. Despite the board's judgment, Jarrott has his defenders. "He's on the cutting edge of pain management," said Kay Hoyt, who works with the therapy department in Jarrott's Covington clinic. "What he is doing is exceptional work with these patients so they can have some functionality in their lives." The suspension of Jarrott's license does not begin until Dec. 26 -- three months to the day after the licensing board's action. But from Sept. 26 on, the board forbid him from being associated with the treatment of chronic pain, and it fined him $5,000. The ruling does not explicitly forbid him from prescribing narcotics. The 90-day period was designed to give Jarrott time to find other doctors for his patients, said C. Byron Berry Jr., the board's attorney. Until the suspension takes effect, however, the agency did not stop Jarrott from practicing medicine -- "as long as it's not chronic-pain management," Berry said. Marie Riccio Wisner, Jarrott's attorney, said she will ask the board to rehear and reconsider the case. If that fails to win a reversal, she said she will appeal to Civil District Court. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman