Supreme Court Set to Weigh in on the Opioid Epidemic in Three Important Physician Cases

Supreme Court Set to Weigh in on the Opioid Epidemic in Three Important Physician Cases

https://medium.com/@fightthefeds/supreme-court-set-to-weigh-in-on-the-opioid-epidemic-in-three-important-physician-cases-c5b6cc0219eb

The Supreme Court will decide United States v Ruan and United States v. Kahn and likely United States v. Naum and determine if a physicians prosecuted by the federal government can be convicted for violating an objective standard of care.

A few years ago, I spent over a month in Northern West Virginia defending a doctor accused of unlawfully prescribing Opiates — specifically Suboxone. A family practice physician running a small clinic in Northern Ohio and West Virginia Dr. George Naum wanted to help patients suffering from the opioid epidemic by providing medication assisted treatment. In small rural communities this service was needed to help those suffering from addiction begin their recovery and start getting their life back together. Dr. Naum joined a practice and began working with a nurse to treat this vulnerable patient population.

Supreme Court Set to Weigh in on the Opioid Epidemic

Fast forward a few years and Dr. Naum found himself in the middle of a federal investigation for, of all things, unlawfully prescribing opiates. The practice was not a pill mill. It was a treatment center. The practice was not prescribing high power narcotics to patients seeking opiates or unlawful purposes but rather a place where people recovering from addiction sought treatment. Unfortunately for Dr. Naum, federal prosecutors not trained in the complexity of healthcare law and medical treatment failed to understand the difference.

To make matters worse, the standards for prosecuting physicians became convoluted over time by federal appellate court decisions that failed to recognize sometimes Doctors are required to make tough calls in the wake of the opioid epidemic. Knowing that Dr. Naum had done nothing wrong we proceeded to trial and were quick to learn that both the prosecutor and the judge stacked the case against us by making a critical error in interpreting Controlled Substance Prescribing laws.

Decided in 1975 the landmark case of United States v. Moore was the first case that determined that the weight of the federal government’s drug trafficking laws could be applied against physicians. To be convicted, a doctor must have abandoned the practice of medicine, ceased acting as a physician, and engaged in drug trafficking as conventionally understood i.e., running a “pill mill”. Since United States v. Moore circuits have widely spilt in their interpretation of the standard necessary to convict a Defendant. In the Fourth Circuit courts determined that a physician could be convicted of drug trafficking if he or she prescribed a medication “beyond the bounds of professional medical treatment”. The Circuit court interpreted this to mean that any doctor who prescribes outside of “professionally recognized norms” may be convicted of Drug Trafficking.

The Court in Dr. Naum’s case determined that Dr. Naum could be convicted if he stepped outside of professional norms for prescribing Suboxone regardless of whether the patients had a legitimate medical need for the treatment. Given that it’s nearly impossible for every doctor to follow the myriad of rules and regulations applied explicitly and in an ad hoc fashion Dr. Naum was convicted. Nearly every practitioner without a robust compliance program and a team of compliance professionals would be. Dr. Naum appealed, all the way to the Supreme Court of the United States.

Meeting Dr. Naum at the Supreme Court was another case, that of Xiulu Ruan. Dr. Ruan was a board-certified interventional pain management specialist in Mobile Alabama. He owned the practice along with his partner John Patrick couch, whom I am also representing before the Supreme Court. Drs Couch and Ruan were indicted in 2016 for unlawfully prescribing drugs. Just as in Naum, the prosecutors acknowledged that the patients, by in large, needed the medications prescribed but they prosecuted them anyway for falling outside of professional norms. The Government elicited testimony from three experts who testified at length that both doctors prescribed medication “outside the standard of care” and “outside the usual course of practice”. Back in 1975 such testimony would not be sufficient to support a criminal conviction. Today its much different. The standard has been sufficiently eroded to achieve convictions against doctors making tough judgment calls in the pain management field.

In all three cases, medical “experts” brought by the government faulted the physicians for: ignoring “red flags”, not conducting a thorough examination, using opiates as a first line of treatment, not abandoning patients who presented inconsistent urine drug screens. The practice of opening up a physician’s medical records and heavily criticizing care based on an unenumerated list of “red flags” or professional norms is something that has sent a lot of innocent doctors to the slammer. Moreover, each physician, Naum, Ruan, and Couch, called experts of their own who were well credentialed and supported the care provided. None of these cases presented the sort of rampant “pill mill” evidence commonly seen in prosecutions of this nature in the early 2000’s.

Similarly, to Naum, Ruan and Couch were the victims of a judicial decision that drastically changed the standard for conviction presented to the jury and stacked all odds against them. In Ruan and Couch the trial court refused to provide a commonly provided instruction that informed the jury that prescriptions written by the doctors “in the good faith treatment of a patient” are lawful. Without the benefit of the “good faith” defense, minor differences between the standard set forth by government experts and the prescribing practices of Ruan and Couch became criminal, just as in Naum.

Ruan and Couch requested the following instruction:

“Good faith in this context means good intentions and the honest exercise of professional judgment as to the patient’s needs. It means that the Defendant acted in accordance with what he reasonably believed to be proper medical practice”

This instruction was a mainstay in opioid prosecutions until a few years ago when the government elected to take the position that the instruction was not a valid statement of the law. The government argued that “good faith” was “subjective” and the standard should be an objective one. The court ruled that a physician cannot save his conduct if he failed to adhere to professional norms but subjectively believed that his prescriptions were legitimate.

All three physicians sought the review of the high court to change the state of law for good. All three physicians sought to stop the prosecution of physicians for what amounted to allegations of mere malpractice and revert to the standard set in 1975 by United States v. Moore.

On November 5, 2021 the Supreme Court agreed to hear the appeal of Ruan v. United States and consolidated the case with a very similar case Kahn v. United States. Naum v. United States is still pending before the court and may be taken up later if the decision in Ruan does not dispense with the issues in his case.

Ruan will be set for oral argument this term and the Justices have elected to decide the very narrow issue of whether the “good faith” defense to opiate prescribing is a valid defense and whether an instruction must be given to the jury. The Court will likely opine on whether a physician’s subjective “good faith” is a relevant consideration for a jury in opioid prosecutions. If the Court determines that “subjective good faith” is relevant, doctors making tough decisions during medical treatment of a patient will get a break. If the Court determines that it is not, doctors will be beholden to the rigid, ever changing, and often unenumerated standards often used by physicians in opioid prosecutions.

While the ruling may be narrowly applied to the issue of “good faith” it will require an analysis of the state of the standard for prescribing opiates and the ruling will have wide ranging implications for all doctors prescribing controlled substances to patients and how they must document their prescriptions to avoid federal scrutiny for their prescribing decisions.

The Court’s decision will either strengthen existing opioid prescribing laws and enable prosecutors to use them against physicians who merely deviate from the “standard of care”, or it will sway to the benefit of prescribers allowing them the benefit of a jury instruction that makes judgment calls made in “good faith” a defense. Regardless, all prescribers should be watching this case and read the court’s dicta very carefully to ensure that their practices stay compliant with the current interpretation of federal regulations in this field.

Ronald Chapman II, ESQ @RonChapmanAtty is an author and nationally-recognized top federal criminal defense attorney, and former prosecutor, with a number of high-profile federal acquittals. “Fight the Feds: Unraveling Federal Criminal Investigations” is available for pre-order now. If you are interested in contacting Ron about a case, contact him here: Chapman Law Group

2 Responses

  1. Well done and said Ronald Chapman, J.D.
    We hope for the best with your efforts to forward the Amicus Brief through the courts and up to the Supreme Court.
    God bless you and the abandoned severe pain sufferers.

  2. Since when did the intent of “practicing in good faith” become irrelevant.? I do not understand why the legal powers that be question good faith in medical practice. Practicing medicine and pharmacy often wander into gray areas where the professional has to decide the best treatment and take care of each patient and unique situation. To me, the medical profession is being attacked and used as a scape goat for the real problem of illegal drug trafficking. When is the government going to go after the real thugs of the drug problem issue, and stop picking on hardworking medical professionals trying to practice medicine? Doctors are afraid to prescribe pain meds here in Houston, and pharmacists are afraid of carrying pain control drugs as well.

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