Pubdate: Wed, 18 Jun 2008 Source: Burlington Times-News (NC) Copyright: 2008 Freedom Communications, Inc. Contact: http://www.thetimesnews.com/sections/contactus/letter.php Website: http://www.thetimesnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1822 Author: Michael D. Abernethy Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) STATE MEDICAL BOARD INVESTIGATES BURLINGTON PSYCHIATRIST The North Carolina Medical Board has accused a Burlington psychiatrist of prescribing narcotics to patients without properly diagnosing their conditions, following up on alleged drug abuse and properly documenting patients' records and medical histories. Kenneth J. Headen, who specializes in psychiatry and addiction psychiatry, disputes the accusations filed Thursday following a board investigation into his records. The accusations stem from several years when he practiced in Reidsville and are based on five patients' records. Headen's Reidsville office closed in March as he began practicing in Burlington at 804 S. Church St. The board will hold a hearing on Aug. 20, at which time Headen's license could be suspended, revoked or limited by the board. According to a list of charges available on the board's Web site, the board became concerned with Headen's treatment of patients suffering from pain and that he had become a source of controlled substances for drug-seeking patients in 2005. In the board's view, he prescribed narcotics without properly documenting the need for them or monitoring their use. At that time, Headen told the board he would cease treating chronic pain and attend a narcotics prescribing course. He completed that course in November 2006. The board alleges Headen never ceased treating chronic pain. In December 2007, the board reviewed several patients' charts. The board alleges those patients were treated for pain after his attendance in the prescribing course, and that proper documentation of their conditions, treatments and medical histories wasn't kept. According to the board, those patients were prescribed narcotics such as methadone, Percocet, Cymbalta and Adderal for conditions including migraine headaches, degenerative joint disease and back pain. In the report, they allege that some patients failed drug tests, which Headen should have been aware of, and that he continued prescribing the narcotics after they failed the drug tests. In a phone interview Friday, Headen said his documentation didn't conform to the board's standards but that he is working to improve his record-keeping. He disputed the other charges. Headen is concerned he's being made a scapegoat for the state's deficient mental health system, he said Friday. Cuts in the system have increased clinics' waiting lists and many of his patients have been "abandoned" by physicians and have legitimate need for chronic pain management. "My commitment is to help serve the underserved. I have hurt no one who's followed my instructions," Headen said. "I have not violated any (Drug Enforcement Agency) laws." During the time he practiced in Reidsville, he ended treatment with more than 150 patients who violated their treatment contracts or showed signs of abuse. He said he still discharges an average of two patients a week for violating their patient agreements. The five patients referred to in the board's list of allegations were exceptions. He said the narcotics prescribing course the board ordered him to take made him feel more comfortable with prescribing medication for chronic pain. He felt compelled to treat patients who came to him for help, he says. "It wasn't my intention to defy (the board)," he said. Headen also responds to the allegations on a personal blog he keeps with Squarespace under the screen name "HEADoc." "In the new office all patients with suspected addiction problems receive routine drug screening. The HEADoc knows that discharging those who violate their agreement with referrals to places they won't even go to or won't accept them anyway is a futile gesture but it puts him in compliance with the Board. Those patients will return to that pool of patients doctors have been conditioned to avoid until another doctor accepts the risk of trying to treat one of their many problems," Headen writes. Headen received his medical degree in 1992 from the medical school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom