The Norwalk Hour

Psychiatri­st who does work for CT agency discipline­d

- By Lisa Backus CONN. HEALTH I-TEAM WRITER This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team (c-hit.org), a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting.

The state Medical Examining Board issued this week a four-year probationa­ry period to a psychiatri­st who is accused of excessive drinking and failing to follow state law on utilizing Connecticu­t’s prescripti­on monitoring program.

Department of Public Health investigat­ors determined that Dr. Susannah Tung, a psychiatri­st, who runs a private practice while also working for the state Department of Correction , abused alcohol to excess at least twice; on Oct. 11 2017 and Feb. 20, 2020.

The board, in addition to the probation, reprimande­d Tung’s license.

Investigat­ors found that Tung failed to meet the standard of care from February 2017 to January 2020 by not utilizing the state Department of Consumer Protection’s Connecticu­t Prescripti­on Monitoring and Reporting System before prescribin­g controlled substances to three patients, documents said.

She also failed to access the prescripti­on monitoring system at least once every 90 days for two patients who were receiving ongoing controlled substance prescripti­ons, DHP documents said.

The incidents occurred in her private practice, DPH officials said. Tung has been employed by the state Department of Correction since July 2018 as a principal psychiatri­st working with inmates, DOC officials said.

The DOC will review the order and make sure any limitation­s on her license are adhered to, said Karen Martucci, spokespers­on for the agency. Tung has 15 days from the board’s decision to provide the DOC with the order, documents said.

The state consumer protection’s Drug Control Division reported Tung to the DPH.

Physicians are required to utilize the Prescripti­on Monitoring Program, which allows health care providers and pharmacist­s to accurately determine which prescripti­ons have been issued to a patient to reduce addiction, prescripti­on abuse and overdoses.

By state law, all prescripti­ons of Schedule II through V drugs including opioid painkiller­s must be reported to the state monitoring and reporting system, according to the consumer protection website.

Under the terms of a consent order approved by the board Tuesday, Tung will be on probation for four years during which she cannot be self-employed and must practice with other physicians at all times. She is also required to undergo therapy, attend a support group, and provide weekly and later biweekly observed urine samples for drugs and alcohol screenings.

Any missed urine screenings will be considered positive for drugs or alcohol, according to the order. Tung must successful­ly complete a course in prescribin­g practices during the probationa­ry period.

Tung’s employer must file monthly reports with DPH indicating whether she is practicing with reasonable skill and safety and in an alcohol and substance-free state, the order said.

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