Pubdate: Wed, 22 Dec 2010 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2010 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: John Ingold, The Denver Post MARIJUANA DOC ARRESTED IN JULY FACING NEW ALLEGATIONS A state official confirmed this morning that a Colorado doctor accused of recommending medical marijuana to a woman who was 6 months pregnant is the same doctor who was arrested over the summer in an undercover police sting. Dr. Manuel De Jesus Aquino could become the first doctor in Colorado to lose his medical license for providing sub-standard care in making a medical-marijuana recommendation. The Colorado Medical Board suspended his licence in November, after he was accused of recommending medical marijuana to a 20-year-old pregnant woman without giving her a physical examination, doing a thorough review of her medical history or asking whether she was pregnant. Chris Lines, a spokesman for the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies, which includes the medical board, said this morning that Aquino is the same doctor Aurora police arrested in July on suspicion of writing shoddy medical-marijuana recommendations to two undercover police officers. In that case, the two officers told Aquino they had been in accidents, which was true, and asked for medical-marijuana recommendations. But the officers said they never told Aquino they were in pain, and they said Aquino didn't perform physical exams on them. Aquino faces felony charges in the case and is scheduled to be arraigned in February. In August, his attorney, Rob Corry, said Aquino didn't do anything wrong. "Dr. Aquino believed the statements (the officers) were making and gave them, based on his professionalism and his subjective medical opinion, his advice," Corry said after Aquino was charged. "Dr. Aquino is not a rubber stamp doctor." It had been unclear whether Aquino was the same doctor who was arrested in July because police named the arrested doctor as Manuel Aquino-Villaman. Lines said the medical board was aware of Aquino's arrest but couldn't take action because Aquino hadn't been convicted of anything and because he invoked his rights against self-incrimination. The medical board's complaint stems from a 3-minute examination Aquino allegedly gave to a pregnant woman, who was 28 weeks along, in January. When the woman gave birth in April, her child tested positive for marijuana and had "initial feeding difficulties," the complaint says. "Pregnancy is a contraindication for the use of medical marijuana," the complaint states, later stating that Aquino "failed to meet the generally accepted standard of medical practice." The complaint against Aquino was first reported by Solutions, a health-policy news website produced by professional journalists at the University of Colorado Denver's School of Public Affairs and funded by private foundations. Solutions' reporting on the complaint can be found at www.healthpolicysolutions.org. The patient is identified in documents only by her initials, C.A. Lines said he couldn't comment how the case came to the medical board's attention. Colorado law requires doctors to have a "bona-fide" relationship with patients to whom they recommend marijuana. A law passed earlier this year in the legislature and new rules soon to be adopted by the Colorado Board of Health specify how doctors should comply with that requirement. "The board is looking at a standard of care," Lines said of the complaint against Aquino. "It's not looking at a medical-marijuana case per se." Aquino has been a doctor since 1974 and licensed in Colorado since 2007, according to a profile of him posted on the Colorado Division of Registrations' website. Aquino specializes in medical-marijuana recommendations, according to the online profile. Aquino's attorney in the board action, Sheila Meer, could not be reached for comment. She told Solutions that Aquino would respond to the complaint within the 30 days allowed. "It would be premature to talk about it until then," Meer told the website. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D