Pubdate: Fri, 28 Mar 2008 Source: Topeka Capital-Journal (KS) Copyright: 2008 The Topeka Capital-Journal Contact: http://cjonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/455 Author: Tim Carpenter Cited: Pain Relieft Network http://www.painreliefnetwork.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) PHYSICIAN PROLIFIC AT WRITING PRESCRIPTIONS 'Pill Mill' Operator Indicted in Deaths; State Was Slow To Act HAYSVILLE -- Stephen Schneider knew the high volume of drug overdoses among his clinic patients was attracting the wrong kind of attention. A piece of the proof emerged in 2006 while Schneider underwent questioning by attorney Larry Wall, who filed a malpractice lawsuit against the physician on behalf of a deceased patient. The interrogation was lengthy and, at times, heated. But the owner of the high-traffic, pain-management clinic was ready. "Have patients died at the clinic?" Wall asked. "Upon advice of counsel," Schneider replied, "I assert my Fifth Amendment rights." "Have you experienced overdoses at the clinic where a patient would receive an injection of narcotic drugs and they would become comatose?" "Upon advice of counsel, I assert my Fifth Amendment right." In all, Schneider invoked his privilege to avoid self-incrimination 352 times in that deposition. Linda Schneider, his wife and business manager of the clinic south of Wichita, raised the same constitutional shield 281 times in a deposition with Wall. The Kansas Board of Healing Arts, which regulates medical professionals, was also on the Schneiders' trail. The agency confirmed instances of negligence in 2004, 2005 and 2006 and filed a disciplinary case against Stephen Schneider in May 2006. "Things were put on a very fast track," said Mark Stafford, the board's lead attorney. Then, the board's case stalled. Schneider Medical Clinic continued to run seven days a week. More civil lawsuits were filed against the Schneiders as overdose deaths among clinic patients climbed. Healing arts complaints linked to the Schneiders stacked up in Topeka while federal prosecutors pressed ahead in Wichita. "What does it take?" asked Rep. Jeff Colyer, an Overland Park Republican and a physician. Not until a federal grand jury issued a 34-count indictment Dec. 20 did the healing arts board act. Board attorneys sought "emergency" suspension of the doctor's medical license a=80" No. 05-22385 a=80" because he was suddenly an "imminent harm to the public health." By the time the board's suspension was official, the doctor had been behind bars for five weeks. "It is tragic when it takes a 64-page indictment to get anyone's attention," Wall said. "I have been taking depositions and filing lawsuits for over two years, and the Board of Healing Arts has sat on its hands." 'Pill Mill' Stephen Schneider, 54, and nurse Linda Schneider, 50, began working in 2002 out of a new $1 million, 14-exam room clinic in Haysville. The doctor, a graduate of the University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine in Kansas City, Mo., focused on treating people who said they had debilitating pain. His freewheeling distribution of pharmaceuticals earned him the nicknames "candy man" and "Schneider the Writer." Federal investigators raided the Broadway Street clinic Sept. 13, 2005, and March 28, 2006. Boxes of evidence were hauled away, but the clinic kept churning out prescriptions in this suburban town of 10,000. The bottom didn't fall out until December, when a grand jury in Topeka returned felony indictments charging the Schneiders with operating a "pill mill." They are alleged to have issued narcotics that led directly to deaths of four patients and indirectly to deaths of 11 others. They were charged with conspiracy, five counts of unlawful distribution of controlled substances, 11 counts of health care fraud, 13 counts of illegal monetary transactions and four counts of money laundering. The Schneiders pleaded not guilty to all charges. Attorneys associated with the Schneiders didn't comment on the case. Stephen Schneider, held in cell No. 106 of the Butler County Jail, was the central target of a federal investigation examining 56 patient deaths from accidental prescription overdoses from 2002 to 2007. Prosecutors say dozens of Schneider patients had close calls. One Wichita hospital reported treating 94 clinic patients with accidental overdoses in the five-year period. "He called patients who died from accidental overdoses 'bad grapes,' " said U.S. Attorney Eric Melgren. One of them was Patricia Gaskill, who was among the four people prosecutors allege died as a direct result of careless doctoring. Gaskill, 49, began going to Schneider in 2003 for treatment of knee pain. She received progressively larger doses of medication. In 2005, Gaskill overdosed. A Wichita hospital notified the Schneider clinic the next day, but Gaskill walked out of the clinic soon after with new prescriptions for Lortab, an addictive narcotic pain reliever; Xanax, a sedative; and OxyContin, a morphine-like painkiller. The coroner ruled her death two days later an accident. Second-Guessing The Board of Healing Arts has been criticized for not acting earlier to revoke the medical license issued to Stephen Schneider in 1988. The agency's current petition against Schneider contains a dozen allegations of professional misconduct, including a role in the death of five patients by drug overdose. But the agency didn't see fit to obtain legal authority to suspend the doctor's license to practice in Kansas until Jan. 29. The 20-month time lag is significant. Between filing of the original action in May 2006 to the suspension, court records indicate, at least seven of Schneider's patients died of accidental drug overdoses. "Could the state have done something to stop it?" asked Sen. Susan Wagle, a Wichita Republican and chairwoman of the Senate Health Care Strategies Committee. Wall, the malpractice attorney representing former Schneider patients, said he provided depositions, exhibits and motions to federal prosecutors as they built a criminal case against the Schneiders. Wall made similar offers of assistance to the Board of Healing Arts, but he was rebuffed. The board doesn't make a habit of investigating doctors based on allegations in malpractice suits, Stafford said. It isn't a good use of resources because only about one-fifth of malpractice cases result in financial settlements, he said. Larry Buening, executive director of the healing arts board, said it was regrettable the board's legal staff didn't move ahead with disciplinary action against Stephen Schneider in 2006. "Hindsight, in our particular case, would say we should have gone with what we had," Buening said. "This is going to sound crass, but 100 percent of patients of 100 percent of doctors die." Betty McBride, president of the board, said federal prosecutors asked the board's staff in January 2007 to idle its civil action to avoid complicating development of a criminal case. "That's exactly what was told to us," McBride said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Tanya Treadway disputed that claim. She produced an Oct. 3, 2006, letter to Stafford that said coordination between the healing arts board and the U.S. Department of Justice would avoid duplication of effort and allow federal prosecutors "to stay out of KBHA's way in its administrative proceedings against Dr. Schneider." Buening responded to Treadway's disclosure by sending a letter to Melgren demanding public acknowledgment of a federal request for the board to delay its disciplinary case. "Both the board's credibility and my personal and professional integrity are now being questioned," Buening wrote. Melgren's reply, "We will not be willing to agree to misrepresentations regarding our conduct." Personal Losses Nightmares born of decisions made at Schneider Medical Clinic are personal to Shadd Cox. He had hugged his mother, Haysville resident JoJo Rodgers, to say goodbye before heading off to work a night shift June 7, 2006. "When we got home she was dead in her bed," Cox said. "It was a very bad situation." Rodgers went to the Schneider clinic in early 2005 for treatment of back pain. An autopsy found a volatile mixture of anti-depressants, muscle relaxants and other medications in her bloodstream. The death of the 46-year-old woman was ruled an accidental overdose by the coroner. Federal prosecutors built part of their criminal case against Schneider by alleging he indirectly contributed to her demise. "She seemed incoherent after her visits with Schneider," Cox said. "Whatever medicine he gave her didn't help." El Dorado resident Donna Dodson, 48, was another Schneider patient to die of an accidental drug overdose after the healing arts board filed its complaint against Schneider and before his license was suspended. "My mom was pretty much my best friend," said Katheryn Allen, a daughter who lives in Chanute. "It was a toxic mixture of three of her medications that killed her." Dodson had fibromyalgia, a form of arthritis characterized by pain and fatigue. In 2005, one of Dodson's friends recommended Schneider. "The first time she went, she was kind of in shock at how much pain medication he had prescribed on her first visit," Allen said. "She said it was the easiest doctor visit she ever had." Schneider elevated the potency of her prescriptions, Allen said. Sometimes, she said, her 48-year-old mother refused to take all the pills given to her. "She told the doctor that, but he still upped the prescriptions," Allen said. Her mother's final appointment at the clinic was in July, less than a month before her death Aug. 16. Investigators with the healing arts board have never contacted Rodgers or Allen about the deaths. Feeling The Pain The clinic had 1,000 clients when shut down. Patients, some of whom complained that area physicians refused to treat them because of negative publicity surrounding the criminal prosecution, rallied on behalf of the Schneiders in Haysville and Wichita. There were requests for cash contributions to the Schneiders' defense fund. Former patients lent support by attending court proceedings involving the Schneiders. Lilly Shipman was in the middle of it all. The Wichita resident was a clinic patient from 2003 until the arrests and viewed Schneider as a "compassionate doctor." While the Schneiders languished behind bars, Shipman was imprisoned by savage withdrawal from morphine and Percocet. Shipman began working with Siobhan Reynolds, president of the Pain Relief Network, a New Mexico-based patient-advocacy group brought to Wichita to generate public sympathy for the incarcerated doctor and his wife. Reynolds orchestrated the filing of a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Justice and the state of Kansas, including the Board of Healing Arts, in an effort keep the Schneider clinic open and medication flowing to patients. "The government is saying Schneider is a killer. It's a complete human rights disaster," said Reynolds, who called for the couple's release on bond. Recordings of jailhouse telephone conversations released by federal prosecutors, however, reveal Reynolds urged the Schneiders to remain behind bars to give Reynolds "leverage." On the tape, Reynolds called her involvement in the case the opportunity of a lifetime and talked of a book or movie on the couple. Federal attorneys said in court papers that the recordings show Reynolds was "using the defendants' criminal case as a springboard for her own designs, which have nothing to do with effective criminal representation for the defendants." Before the network's lawsuit derailed in a federal courtroom in Wichita, Shipman was called by a former patient claiming that she and her husband wanted to die rather than live without a steady supply of morphine from the clinic. Shipman called Reynolds to see if it was proper to send the addicts to a hospital emergency room. According to an affidavit from Shipman, Reynolds replied, "If anyone is going to kill themselves, make sure they do it publicly." Reynolds recommended a Wichita hospital parking lot or the lobby of a local television station as ideal locations, Shipman said. "I asked her," Shipman said, "I thought you came in here to save lives?" The Pain Relief Network founder's rebuttal, according to Shipman, was, "Unfortunately, there will have to be deaths for this cause." In a separate interview, Reynolds said her first inclination was to help suffering people obtain treatment. But, she said, that wasn't realistic in every instance. Reynolds said she told Shipman, "If you can't get help, make it count." A public suicide by a drug-addicted Schneider patient would create momentum for a campaign to legitimize "opiate therapy" in the United States, Reynolds said. "People simply do not believe this unless they see it with their own eyes," she added. Shipman severed ties to Reynolds and withdrew support for the Schneiders. She found a new doctor, but still wonders how a physician licensed by the Board of Healing Arts led her down a dark road. "I believed in him," she said. "Now, I find he had me on five times the amount of medication I should have been on. This guy supposedly had my interests at heart." Sen. Jim Barnett, an Emporia physician and former Republican nominee for governor, said the Schneider case illustrated the need for the state to establish stronger safeguards for patients. "What bothers me most is that while this has gone on," he said, "the public has not been protected." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath