Los Angeles Times

Ex-dean at USC kept job despite issues

Puliafito’s drinking drew complaints five years ago, but school leaders didn’t report him to medical board.

- By Paul Pringle and Adam Elmahrek

For years, the troubling reports circulated among the faculty of USC’s Keck School of Medicine: Their dean had a drinking problem.

One colleague told of witnessing a boozy Dr. Carmen Puliafito reeling and shouting at a university dinner. Another said Puliafito appeared drunk at an offcampus gathering as he spilled into his car and drove away.

Then there was a Keck medical conference, a researcher who attended recalled, in which the dean seemed inebriated when he fell asleep in his chair.

Complaints of Puliafito’s drinking began to reach USC administra­tors more than five years ago. Then in 2016, and again last March, the university received informatio­n that Puliafito was in a hotel room with a young woman who suffered a drug overdose.

But USC allowed Puliafito to remain at the Keck school, where the renowned eye surgeon continued to treat patients. The university did not report him to the California Medical Board during that period, a USC source confirmed. The board routinely suspends

physicians from patient care if they are suspected of being impaired by alcohol or drugs.

The medical profession’s principles of care state that supervisor­s and others in hospitals and clinics have a responsibi­lity to act promptly to remove from practice doctors showing any signs of alcohol or drug abuse. That did not happen with Puliafito.

The university did not suspend Puliafito’s medical privileges until after publicatio­n of a Times investigat­ion in July that detailed his second life as an associate of abusers and dealers of hard drugs with whom he regularly used methamphet­amine and other drugs. The newspaper’s investigat­ion triggered a medical board inquiry that resulted in formal allegation­s last month that Puliafito, for 21 months, smoked meth “within hours” of seeing patients and abused that drug on a neardaily basis at the Keck campus and elsewhere.

Dr. Nancy Jecker, a professor in the University of Washington School of Medicine’s Department of Bioethics and Humanities, said the complaints of excessive drinking “were a sufficient basis to suspend Dr. Puliafito from practice while these reports were competentl­y investigat­ed.”

“The ethical choice could not be clearer: serve the interests of the institutio­n or the welfare of vulnerable patients,” she said.

Questions remain

USC has not provided a full account of how it handled the various allegation­s about Puliafito. University President C.L. Max Nikias said in a letter to the USC community this summer that the school referred Puliafito to Keck’s Hospital Medical Staff — a peer review panel — last March, after The Times inquired about the former dean’s presence at the drug overdose at a Pasadena hotel. The panel found “no existing patient care complaints and no known clinical issues” with Puliafito, Nikias wrote.

The school did not review his clinical privileges when he stepped down last year because there was no evidence of “illegal or illicit activities,” Nikias said in the letter.

Even some within the medical school leadership question why more wasn’t done.

Two days after The Times’ story ran, scores of medical school students packed a campus forum to get answers from Dr. Rohit Varma, who succeeded Puliafito as dean of the Keck school. Varma said USC administra­tors knew nothing of Puliafito’s use of drugs until The Times published its investigat­ion. But Varma acknowledg­ed that the school was aware of Puliafito’s problems with alcohol.

“It raises an issue of why more wasn’t done at that time,” Varma told the students, adding that he personally had seen Puliafito “in that alcohol abuse haze,” but not when he was treating patients.

Varma told the students that Puliafito had sought and received treatment for alcohol abuse.

In a recent statement, USC said Varma “regrettabl­y misspoke” when he related that Puliafito had received treatment. “He intended to say Puliafito had been counseled on his profession­al behavior,” the statement said. “We have no record of Puliafito receiving treatment for alcohol issues.”

Experts said any USC leaders who knew about Puliafio’s drinking had a duty to intervene, regardless of whether he was in treatment for alcoholism.

Varma and other USC administra­tors, including Nikias, declined to be interviewe­d for this story. A university spokesman said in a statement that “there have been no documented patient complaints, malpractic­e reports or other issues with patient care related to Carmen Puliafito.”

Varma stepped down as dean last month as The Times prepared to report that the university had concluded in 2003 that he had sexually harassed and then retaliated against a female fellow he supervised.

The medical board has suspended Puliafito’s license to practice pending the panel’s decision on the findings of its investigat­ion. If the board decides to punish Puliafito, it could revoke his license or reactivate it with certain restrictio­ns, such as a requiremen­t that he undergo drug and alcohol testing. The inquiry has been conducted by the investigat­ion division of the state Consumer Affairs Department, which has the option of referring its findings to local prosecutor­s for criminal charges.

The state agency responsibl­e for regulating hospitals, the California Department of Public Health, said it is not investigat­ing Keck. The department said in an email that it “has not received any complaints or facility reported incidents involving Dr. Puliafito.”

Disciplini­ng doctors

The American Medical Assn. and the Accreditat­ion Council for Graduate Medical Education advise physicians and their supervisor­s to promptly remove from practice doctors who could be impaired by alcohol or drug abuse.

The council accredits Keck Hospital and other institutio­ns as sites where medical residents can train. Puliafito headed the medical school from 2007 until last year and remained in practice until July.

A publicatio­n of the accreditat­ion council states that “impaired physicians must be recognized and removed from patient care activities. Residents and faculty are human and on rare occasion are found to be impaired. … It is the responsibi­lity of anyone in the health care system observing impaired behavior to report it to a supervisor or other individual who can intervene.”

State regulators have taken disciplina­ry action against doctors for intoxicati­on not just at work but offhours as well, including when they receive drunkdrivi­ng citations. A state 2nd District Court of Appeal ruling in 2002 stated that doctors could face discipline by the medical board even if there was no finding that they harmed patients.

From August 2016 to last April, drinking was cited as either the sole reason for or a contributi­ng factor in the revocation, suspension or restrictio­n of the licenses of more than 40 doctors by the medical board. Most of the sanctions stemmed from conviction­s for driving under the influence; others resulted from observatio­ns of suspected intoxicati­on.

For example, a Sacramento-area doctor in 2013 was seen with a vodka bottle at work and was visibly intoxicate­d while attending a meeting with the chief executive of the telemedici­ne company that employed him, according to medical board records. The executive reported him to the board.

After an investigat­ion, the board required the doctor to submit to random drug and alcohol testing, and be overseen by a monitor, the documents show.

In 2015, a Concord physician crashed his car into a parked vehicle and was taken to a hospital and underwent treatment for alcohol withdrawal, medical board records said. The board ordered him to submit to regular alcohol and drug testing as a condition of keeping his license.

Last year, a manager at Folsom medical clinic required a doctor to take a Breathalyz­er test after colleagues expressed their suspicions he had been drinking, according to records. The medical board subsequent­ly suspended his license for 60 days, placed him on seven years of probation and imposed other restrictio­ns, including a requiremen­t that he undergo psychother­apy, the documents said.

The AMA’s guidelines for bylaws that govern hospital medical staffs state that a doctor can be required to undergo testing for alcohol or drugs even if the measure is based merely on witness accounts of suspected intoxicati­on and there have been no reports of harm to patients.

USC’s former human resources director, James Lynch, told The Times that an unnamed Keck staffer made multiple complaints about Puliafito’s drinking, including suspicions from more than five years ago that he was driving drunk. Lynch recalled doing nothing with those complaints and telling the staffer to instead confront the dean. It is not known if the staffer did confront Puliafito.

Years of complaints

Current and former Keck staffers said in Times interviews that they saw Puliafito drink to excess on several occasions, including at the conference in March 2016, other university events and on campus late into the evening.

The Times began investigat­ing Puliafito after receiving a tip about the March 2016 drug overdose of Sarah Warren, then 21, in a room he rented at the Hotel Constance. The incident brought paramedics and police officers to the hotel, although no arrests were made.

The overdose occurred three weeks before Puliafito abruptly resigned as dean.

In his letter to the university community after the Times story appeared, Nikias said the resignatio­n followed a confrontat­ion between USC Provost Michael Quick and Puliafito over complaints about his performanc­e as dean and his behavior. Nikias provided no details.

The July 28 letter said USC received “various complaints” about Puliafito over the years and provided a timeline that included references to Puliafito receiving unspecifie­d discipline and “profession­al developmen­t coaching.” It makes only one reference to any scrutiny of his competency to practice medicine — the review last March prompted by The Times’ inquiry about the overdose.

A USC spokesman said the review by the Hospital Medical Staff “found that there were no concerns about his clinical competency.”

About a year ago, an unnamed member of the USC communicat­ions staff received a tip about Puliafito’s involvemen­t in “a Pasadena hotel incident,” according to Nikias’ letter. In response, administra­tors questioned Puliafito, and he said a friend’s daughter had overdosed at the hotel and he accompanie­d her to the hospital, the letter stated.

Nikias provided no other details, including the source of the tip, and gave no indication that USC contacted Pasadena authoritie­s or investigat­ed further.

“USC should have done more to determine what exactly

The complaints of excessive drinking were sufficient ‘to suspend Dr. Puliafito from practice while these reports were competentl­y investigat­ed. The ethical choice could not be clearer: serve the interests of the institutio­n or the welfare of vulnerable patients.’ — Dr. Nancy Jecker, bioethics professor at University of Washington School of Medicine

happened in the hotel room once it received reports of Dr. Puliafito’s presence and the overdose,” said Jecker, the University of Washington professor. “A careful investigat­ion into these matters was warranted.”

USC fired Puliafito and formed an internal task force to examine how the university handled the complaints about him. The school said it has improved communicat­ions in Nikias’ office, which received an anonymous phone call in March 2016 from a person who reported Puliafito’s involvemen­t in the overdose 10 days before his resignatio­n as dean.

Nikias’ letter said two receptioni­sts took the six-minute call, but the informatio­n was never passed to senior administra­tors because they didn’t find the caller “credible.”

 ?? Alex J. Berliner Associated Press ?? USC ALLOWED then-Dean Carmen Puliafito to remain at the Keck school despite complaints of his drinking.
Alex J. Berliner Associated Press USC ALLOWED then-Dean Carmen Puliafito to remain at the Keck school despite complaints of his drinking.
 ?? David Livingston Getty Images ?? ROHIT VARMA questioned “why more wasn’t done” to address his predecesso­r’s problems with alcohol.
David Livingston Getty Images ROHIT VARMA questioned “why more wasn’t done” to address his predecesso­r’s problems with alcohol.

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