Stamford Advocate

Medical board suspends doctor’s license

Physician accused of not following probation orders

- By Lisa Backus 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 has agreed to suspend the license of a physician who is accused of repeatedly failing to comply with the terms of his prior discipline for abusing alcohol.

The board this week also discipline­d a neurologis­t for his prescribin­g habits and supported a plan to reinstate the medical license of a former Madison physician who was convicted of criminal drug charges.

In 2012, the board revoked the medical license of John D. Lynch, II, a former emergency department physician with Hartford Healthcare, after he was fired for coming to work smelling of alcohol, state Department of Public Health documents said.

The board reinstated Lynch’s license in January 2020 and in February 2021 Lynch could have resumed practicing medicine in Connecticu­t under a threeyear probation with certain conditions including that he continues to seek alcohol abuse treatment, submit to random urine screens and attend private and group treatment.

In June, a private therapist issued a report to the agency indicating that Lynch “was not able to practice medicine with reasonable skill or safety.”

DPH documents also said that since February when the probationa­ry period began, Lynch has not attended individual or support group treatment meetings, failed to submit random urine screens and failed to participat­e in a required clinical skills evaluation.

Lynch’s license is now under temporary suspension until a hearing takes place on Dec. 1. DPH said Lynch has been living in Virginia and not practicing in Connecticu­t.

In other action, the board supported DPH’s plan to reinstate the medical license of Scott Houghton of Madison, who was convicted in 2013 of four drug charges including two counts of sale of a narcotic or hallucinog­enic.

In taking the action, the board could only support or oppose DPH’s plan but could not be the authority that determines whether or not his medical license is reinstated since he currently does not hold a license and he was never formally discipline­d, agency officials said.

Houghton pleaded guilty to the criminal charges under the Alford Doctrine. Under the plea, defendants do not admit guilt but concede that the state has enough evidence to gain a conviction.

Houghton did not renew his medical license in 2011 as the criminal case was pending. In a proposed order for his reinstatem­ent, DPH presented numerous allegation­s against Houghton including that he failed to monitor several patients for whom he had prescribed opiates, and in one case accepted free meals and lodging at Mohegan Sun and Foxwoods casinos from a patient.

DPH investigat­ors found that Houghton continued to write prescripti­ons after his controlled substance registrati­on was suspended and found he failed to adequately examine elderly patients who he had prescribed opiates, documents said. Houghton also illegally gave patients prescripti­ons for methadone to treat addiction, investigat­ors said.

Houghton denies all of the allegation­s listed by DPH investigat­ors but he admitted that he was convicted of four drug offenses in 2013, documents said. He was sentenced to a five-year probation in the criminal cases.

Houghton successful­ly completed the five-year criminal probation and has agreed to practice under several restrictio­ns including that he is prohibited from writing prescripti­ons for controlled substances and he must practice in a setting with at least one other licensed physician, documents said.

He also must attend coursework on ethics and boundaries with patients, according to the order. His license will be reprimande­d as part of the order, documents said. He is also required to pass a skills evaluation and an exam before the DPH will reinstate his license, officials said.

The board also reprimande­d the license of Dr. Arjuna Mannam, who practices neurology for Trinity Health of New England and had prescribed a toxic amount of Dilantin to a patient who was being treated for a painful facial nerve condition, documents said.

The patient complained to DPH about the treatment, which took place in September 2019, the documents said. Mannam’s license is on probation for six months during which he is required to take coursework in prescribin­g practices.

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