Pubdate: Mon, 12 May 2003 Source: Wilmington Morning Star (NC) Copyright: 2003 Wilmington Morning Star Contact: http://www.wilmingtonstar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/500 Author: Roger Alford, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) MANY APPALACHIAN DOCTORS SNARED IN DRUG CRACKDOWN Most of the doctors had been recruited to the region to help care for rural residents. PIKEVILLE, KY. - More than a dozen Appalachian doctors, many of them recruited to work in the medically underserved region, have been taken away from their patients in handcuffs for allegedly supplying drug addicts with powerful narcotics. In eastern Kentucky alone, seven small-town doctors are in prison or on their way for illegally prescribing drugs like the painkiller OxyContin. At least six others have been arrested in the hills of West Virginia, Virginia, and southern Ohio. Advocates for the mountain region say that while the loss of so many doctors leaves a void, in these circumstances, the departures can only improve medical care. "As badly as we need more physicians, we certainly don't need the type that will violate their oaths and do much more harm than good," said Ewell Balltrip, executive director of the Kentucky Appalachian Commission. Federal and state law enforcement agencies began cracking down on wayward physicians in Appalachia in 2000, after OxyContin, intended for cancer patients and others suffering from severe pain, began showing up in large quantities on the black market. The first eastern Kentucky physician snared in the crackdown - Dr. Ali Sawaf, 61, of Harlan - had allegedly turned to illegally prescribing OxyContin and other painkillers after he lost his $250,000-a-year job at a regional clinic. Assistant U.S. Attorney Roger West said at the time that Dr. Sawaf handed out prescriptions almost as quickly as he could write them. The latest physician to plead guilty, Dr. David Procter, 52, of South Shore, traded pain killers for sex. He admitted to a federal judge that he had sexual relations with two female patients after they became hooked on the drugs. Most of the doctors caught in the past two years had been recruited to the region to help care for rural residents, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Pat Molloy. "They may not have stepped over the line before they got here, but clearly they were corruptible," Mr. Molloy said. The problem is not confined to Appalachia. A Florida doctor was convicted of manslaughter in the OxyContin overdose deaths of four patients. A Connecticut physician, nicknamed "Dr. Feelgood" by police for the prescriptions he wrote for OxyContin and other pain killers, was convicted last year. Authorities blame the abuse of OxyContin for scores of overdose deaths in Appalachia. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh