MEDICAL LICENSURE COM'N v. Herrera

918 So. 2d 918, 19 A.L.R. 6th 883, 2005 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 239, 2005 WL 1053733
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 6, 2005
Docket2030977
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 918 So. 2d 918 (MEDICAL LICENSURE COM'N v. Herrera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MEDICAL LICENSURE COM'N v. Herrera, 918 So. 2d 918, 19 A.L.R. 6th 883, 2005 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 239, 2005 WL 1053733 (Ala. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

On Application for Rehearing

This court's opinion of March 11, 2005, is withdrawn, and the following opinion is substituted therefor:

The Alabama State Board of Medical Examiners (hereinafter "the Board") filed an administrative complaint before the Medical Licensure Commission of Alabama ("the Commission") against Pascual Herrera, Jr., M.D. In its complaint, the Board sought the revocation of Dr. Herrera's license to practice medicine in the State of Alabama. After conducting a hearing over the course of three days, the Commission, on April 25, 2001, entered an order making certain factual findings and ordering that Dr. Herrera's license to practice medicine in Alabama be revoked. Dr. Herrera timely appealed to the Circuit Court of Montgomery County (hereinafter "the trial court") pursuant to § 41-22-20, Ala. Code 1975.

The trial court entered a judgment on June 14, 2004,1 in which it reversed the April 25, 2001, order of the Commission and ordered that Dr. Herrera's medical license be reinstated. The Commission timely appealed to this court. For the reasons discussed below, we reverse the trial court's judgment.

The record on appeal contains more than 800 pages of transcribed testimony and a multitude of exhibits. That evidence reveals the following pertinent facts.

At the hearing before the Commission, the Board presented the testimony of two witnesses. One of the Board's witnesses was an investigator who explained the method by which the charts of four of Dr. Herrera's patients were randomly selected and reviewed by the Board's expert witness, Dr. Michael L. McBrearty. Dr. McBrearty is a family practitioner; he testified that he has approximately five patients on opiates or other narcotic pain medications. Dr. McBrearty testified that he typically referred chronic-pain patients to other doctors for treatment.

The evidence in the record focuses on Dr. Herrera's treatment of three of those four patients, namely, D.L., G.S.L., and J.W.D.L. first sought treatment from Dr. Herrera on August 15, 1996. D.L. informed Dr. Herrera that she had been involved in an automobile accident a week earlier and that she had been hospitalized in a rural hospital in Georgia for two days following that accident. D.L. informed Dr. Herrera that the rural hospital had only removed broken glass from her skin and hair and that no tests had been conducted on her during her hospitalization. However, it is undisputed that D.L. was given narcotic pain relievers during her stay at the rural hospital.

Dr. Herrera testified that at the time D.L. first sought treatment from him, she was in severe pain and distress as a result of her injuries, which included a broken vertebra and broken ribs. Dr. Herrera did not request the records from the hospital that had treated D.L. following her 1996 automobile accident. Rather, Dr. Herrera ordered a variety of tests to assess D.L.'s condition. Dr. McBrearty opined that the tests Dr. Herrera ordered were probably duplicative of tests that had, or should have, been conducted during D.L.'s two-day hospitalization.2 *Page 921

Dr. McBrearty also testified that during Dr. Herrera's initial treatment of D.L., as well as in subsequent visits, Dr. Herrera prescribed an excessive amount of narcotic drugs for D.L. Dr. McBrearty further testified that during Dr. Herrera's continued treatment of D.L., Dr. Herrera prescribed for D.L. an "unusual combination" of the medications Valium, Soma, Paxil, and Lortab; that Dr. Herrera often prescribed Tuss DS, a narcotic cough medicine that contains hydrocodone, in addition to those medications; and that those prescriptions constituted "a lot of medication." Dr. Herrera also prescribed D.L. up to three doses per day of the narcotic medication Percocet for "breakthrough pain." We note that on cross-examination Dr. McBrearty agreed that reasonable physicians could disagree whether D.L. needed narcotic pain medicine from the date of her initial treatment and that they could also disagree regarding the amount of narcotic pain medicine that Dr. Herrera had actually prescribed for D.L. However, Dr. McBrearty also testified, in response to questioning by the Commission members, that in addition to the other hydrocodone-based narcotic medications Dr. Herrera had prescribed for D.L., he had also consistently prescribed Tuss DS, the hydrocodone-containing narcotic cough medicine, for D.L. for two and a half years.

The record indicates that Dr. Herrera treated D.L. 65 times over the course of 31 months. Dr. McBrearty testified that that number of visits indicated that Dr. Herrera had treated D.L. unusually frequently and that there had been no need for Dr. Herrera to have treated D.L. as often as he did. Dr. Herrera treated D.L. weekly for approximately a year following her accident and every few weeks after that.

Dr. McBrearty also reviewed the tests Dr. Herrera performed on D.L. during those frequent visits, and he testified at length regarding the necessity of those tests, many of which he testified appeared to have been routinely performed. In summary, Dr. McBrearty believed that Dr. Herrera had a pattern of ordering or performing unnecessary tests on D.L., that the facts derived from D.L.'s patient chart did not always justify those tests, and that Dr. Herrera did not alter the course of his treatment of D.L. based on the results of the tests he did perform on her.

Dr. McBrearty also testified regarding Dr. Herrera's prescription of an anti-inflammatory medication for D.L. that has a side effect of causing gastrointestinal bleeding. In June 1997, after she had been taking the anti-inflammatory medication for some time, D.L. suffered a gastrointestinal bleed and later had surgery for a "massive gastric obstruction" on September 3, 1997. Dr. McBrearty first testified that Dr. Herrera had kept prescribing the anti-inflammatory medication between June and September 1997. However, on cross-examination, Dr. McBrearty admitted that he had initially overlooked the fact that other doctors who covered for Dr. Herrera during much of the time that he was out of work because of his injuries from a 1997 automobile accident had continued D.L. on that medication.3 *Page 922 Dr. Herrera resumed treating D.L. in late August 1997, shortly before her gastrointestinal surgery; however, he did not discontinue the prescription of the anti-inflammatory medication at that time.

Dr. Herrera testified that he believed that D.L. had already stopped taking the anti-inflammatory medication at the time he resumed treating D.L. in August 1997. Dr. Herrera testified that he was "close to 100 per cent certain" that D.L.'s chart inaccurately indicated that she was continuing to take the anti-inflammatory medication at that time. Dr. Herrera explained that he believed that his office staff had erroneously continued to include the anti-inflammatory medication in the list of medications D.L. was taking until October 1997, when he entered a specific order in D.L.'s patient chart discontinuing that medication. Dr. Herrera stated that he was having difficulty with his office staff during that time period, that an inaccurate patient chart was "definitely" a problem, and that "these little mistakes that can turn into a big mistake did happen."

Dr. McBrearty also took issue with Dr. Herrera's treatment of J.W., who Dr. Herrera had treated for low-back pain since September 11, 1996. Dr. McBrearty stated that Dr. Herrera treated J.W. frequently and that J.W. always presented with the same complaints, i.e., severe pain and a cough. J.W.

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Bluebook (online)
918 So. 2d 918, 19 A.L.R. 6th 883, 2005 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 239, 2005 WL 1053733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medical-licensure-comn-v-herrera-alacivapp-2005.