The Denver Post

Doctor settles wrongful death suit

Attention to painkiller addiction increasing

- By Elise Schmelzer

A Denver doctor this week settled a lawsuit alleging he caused a mother’s accidental opioid overdose by prescribin­g too many pain medicines, and experts say the agreement is a sign that legal attempts to address the opioid crisis increasing­ly may be focused on individual medical providers rather than big drug companies.

Dr. Andrew Hong settled the lawsuit for an undisclose­d amount of money while a jury deliberate­d after a six-day trial in Denver District Court. The settlement comes as Colorado ramps up its enforcemen­t of dangerous prescribin­g practices and, at the state level, takes on the pharmaceut­ical companies that create the addictive medicines. The increased attention on opioid addiction and deaths has prompted wide-scale change across Colorado’s medical community, medical and legal profession­als said.

Hong’s attorney, Scott Rendleman, said he could not comment on the doctor’s case because the settlement is subject to a confidenti­ality agreement. But he said it’s part of a growing trend of medical profession­als facing law

suits and investigat­ions in connection to opioid prescripti­ons. In fact, the law firm he works for — Hall, Prangle and Schoonveld — created a dedicated unit of attorneys to defend doctors and medical profession­als against lawsuits related to opioids.

“Colorado is very aggressive­ly policing practioner­s,” he said.

Jennifer Goodridge, 40, died Sept. 9, 2017, of an accidental overdose after taking a cocktail of opioids, muscle relaxers and barbiturat­es she had been prescribed by Hong. She had been seeing him since 2013 at Metro Multidisci­plinary Doctors, and in 2014 he prescribed her with a low dose of Fentanyl administer­ed through a patch to treat neck and back pain, according to the lawsuit.

Over the next two years, Goodridge repeatedly asked for early refills of her prescripti­on, asked for increased dosages and took other controlled substances that she obtained other ways — red flags that she was addicted. Her family became worried and her husband tried to keep her from driving because he believed she had become unsafe, said Anthony Viorst, the family’s attorney.

Hong should have recognized there was a problem, Viorst said.

“She really had a lot of signs for the potential for overdose,” he said. “He knew that she was a risk, we believe, and yet he continued to prescribe.”

Hong said he didn’t know that Goodridge wasn’t taking her medication­s as prescribed until the lawsuit and didn’t realize that Goodridge had been lying to get early refills of her prescripti­ons, according to the response to the suit filed by his attorneys. He said he offered her other treatment options and counseled her extensivel­y about the dangers of pain medicines.

Three days before Goodridge died, Hong added a prescripti­on for oxycodone while maintainin­g her other prescripti­ons for Oxycontin as well as a muscle relaxant and a migraine medication. He provided them to her a week early because Goodridge lied and said she was traveling the following week.

When Goodridge died Sept. 17, 2016, she left behind her husband and two young children, now 10 and 13 years old.

“They were devastated,” Viorst said.

Hong’s license remains active, though Hong is required within 30 days to report the settlement to the Colorado Medical Board, which oversees physicians licenses.

The board will then review the case to see whether it warrants further investigat­ion or discipline.

But Hong already had run afoul of Colorado’s medical board for opioid prescripti­ons even before the settlement in Goodridge’s case.

Hong was admonished in June for prescribin­g high doses of opioids to two patients beginning in August 2014. A panel of the Colorado Medical Board decided not to pursue formal proceeding­s against his medical license, but issued a written reprimand instead. He ignored signs that the patients were misusing the drugs and the panel found his care “fell below generally accepted standards of practice.”

“Specifical­ly, you failed to timely address aberrant behavior, prescribed opioids in conjunctio­n with benzodiaze­pine, and failed to coordinate care with another provider who was prescribin­g controlled substances to your patient,” the reprimand said.

One of the patients — labeled Patient 1 in the letter — had a history of drug abuse and was arrested and in the emergency room multiple times while under Hong’s care, sometimes in connection to her use of opioids. Hong told the board that he was not aware of these problems and thus continued to give her prescripti­ons, according to the letter.

The Colorado Medical Board does not collect data specifical­ly counting the number of cases it opens related to opioid prescribin­g, said Lee Rasizer, spokesman for the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies.

The department most recently revised its guidelines for safely prescribin­g opioids in March, though those don’t have the force of law.

Colorado doctors have been prescribin­g fewer pain pills, and rules regarding such prescripti­ons have evolved rapidly over the past five years, including requiremen­ts that doctors check a database that lists all of a patient’s prescripti­ons, said Robert Valuck, executive director of the Colorado Consortium for Prescripti­on Drug Abuse Prevention.

“It’s like turning a giant ocean liner around very quickly,” Valuck said. “It doesn’t turn on a dime.”

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