The Norwalk Hour

State medical board reprimands 2 doctors

- By Kate Farrish This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team , a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting.

The state Medical Examining Board on Tuesday reprimande­d two doctors, including fining a Waterbury physician $10,000 for inappropri­ately prescribin­g high doses of narcotics to a patient.

In addition to the fine and reprimand, the board also placed the medical license of the Waterbury physician, Dr. Philip A. Mongelluzz­o Jr., on probation for two years, state records show.

Mongelluzz­o failed to meet the standard of care for a patient between 2014 and 2018 when he did not appropriat­ely treat the patient’s chronic pain and prescribed the narcotics without documentin­g the therapeuti­c reasons for the drugs, according to a consent order that Mongelluzz­o signed.

The order said Mongelluzz­o, the owner of Care Beyond Medicine in Waterbury, also prescribed sedatives to the patient without limits and without an adequate medical purpose for doing so.

While not admitting to wrongdoing, Mongelluzz­o chose not to contest the allegation­s, the consent order said. The doctor has completed coursework on proper prescribin­g practices. During the probation, Mongelluzz­o must hire a physician to monitor his practice, the consent order said.

His attorney, Richard Brown, said this was a difficult case because the patient had become a friend of Mongelluzz­o, and the doctor did help the patient manage his chronic pain. Still, Brown said, Mongelluzz­o admits he did not keep adequate records or follow the proper protocol. Mongelluzz­o is no longer accepting patients who are suffering from chronic pain, Brown said.

“This was a unique situation,” Brown said. “He has taken this very seriously.”

In an unrelated case, the board reprimande­d the resident physician license of Dr. Daniel Chen of Hartford for engaging in “illegal, unethical and unprofessi­onal conduct” when he falsified a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n card, state records show.

Chen, a 2016 graduate of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, presented the falsified vaccine card to the University of Connecticu­t School of Medicine, state records show. UConn reported Chen to the state Department of Public Health.

While not admitting wrongdoing, Chen chose not to contest the allegation and signed a consent order in which he agreed to the reprimand.

Dr. Robert A. Green, a board member, called Chen’s case sad and said that since the reprimand will be reported to a national database of disciplina­ry actions against doctors, “this is going to follow him forever.”

Chen’s attorney, Gretchen Randall, said the mistake cost her client his position at UConn with just a few months to go in the program. He has since been licensed in California and is doing telehealth radiology, she said. She said Chen has admitted that he made a “very serious error in judgment” and “he really has learned that lesson.”

 ?? Dreamstime / Tribune News Service ?? Dr. Daniel Chen, accused of submitting a falsified COVID vaccinatio­n card to the UConn School of Medicine, was one of two doctors reprimande­d by the state medical board.
Dreamstime / Tribune News Service Dr. Daniel Chen, accused of submitting a falsified COVID vaccinatio­n card to the UConn School of Medicine, was one of two doctors reprimande­d by the state medical board.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States