Monday, February 25, 2013

Cruise passengers are sunk before they ever sue

After an engine room fire caused the Carnival Triumph cruise ship to lose power off the coast of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula Feb. 10, conditions deteriorated rapidly.

With the ship adrift and power out, the onboard water and sewage systems failed. During the next five days, as the ship was being towed to port in Alabama, the Triumph listed sharply, "causing human waste to spill out of non-functioning toilets, flood across the vessel's floors and halls and drip down the vessel's walls," according to a lawsuit filed Friday in Miami by Cassie Terry, a passenger from Brazoria County.

Terry and other passengers had to "wade through human feces in order to reach food lines where the wait was counted in hours, only to receive rations of spoiled food," the lawsuit said.

What was supposed to be a four-day vacation cruise became a nightmare aboard "a floating toilet, a floating Petri dish, a floating hell."

Terry was one of the first passengers to sue Carnival over the Poop Ship debacle, but she and others considering lawsuits may find the legal journey on which they are about to embark even more harrowing.

Maritime law experts say passengers waive most legal rights when they buy cruise tickets. The fine print in ticket contracts basically requires any lawsuits be subjected to arbitration in a federal court in Miami. That's going to be inconvenient for the Poop Ship's predominantly Texas-based passengers.

Only cases involving personal injury, illness or death can be heard in court. The squalid conditions or allegations of gross negligence described in some of the lawsuits may not be enough to get around the arbitration clause.

"The cruise lines want each person to have to go to arbitration and get a lawyer and spend money," said attorney Adam Brum of Morgan & Morgan in Miami, who has talked to several passengers but hasn't filed a case yet. "It makes it very hard."

What's more, Carnival's ticket contract, available on its website, shows that passengers waive their rights to a jury trial and to joining in a class-action lawsuit. That means for most potential plaintiffs, the legal costs would exceed any amount they could reasonably hope to recover.

"There's a built-in impediment," said Michael Doyle, a Houston lawyer who specializes in maritime law and who isn't involved in any of the Triumph cases. "You don't realize how little you're protected and how few remedies you have."

Chance to cruise again

Carnival has said each passenger will receive a full refund for the cruise and transportation expenses to Galveston, where the ship departed on Feb. 7, as well as an additional payment of $500 a person.

Each will also get a credit for a future cruise. Seriously.

Not since the airline tarmac strandings of 2008 have we seen such a laughable attempt at compensation. If you fail to maintain adequate separation between passengers and sewage, offering customers a chance to experience it again isn't recompense.

"The situation onboard was difficult, and we are very sorry for what has happened," Carnival chief executive Gerry Cahill said in a statement on the company's website. "We pride ourselves on providing our guests with a great vacation experience, and clearly we failed in this case."

This, though, wasn't the only case. In 2010, a fire in the engine room incapacitated the Carnival Splendor, toilets stopped working and tugs were dispatched to tow the disabled vessel to shore. In the past three years, at least three other similar incidents involving other cruise lines have been reported, according to Cruise Critic, an online guide for cruise passengers.

Redundancy rules

The International Maritime Organization, the United Nations group that oversees safety at sea, issued new guidelines for cruise ships in 2010 that would require redundancies to maintain propulsion, steering and other vital systems in case of an accident.

The new rules, though, apply only to ships built after mid-2010, which covers just a few of those in service. Most active cruise ships are older than that. The Triumph, for example, was launched in 1999.

Retrofitting the vessels with redundant systems was deemed too expensive, Cruise Critic reported.

Instead, the cruise industry has opted to insulate itself by requiring that passengers sign away their rights before they get onboard.

That leaves little recourse if you find yourself standing in human feces, waiting hours for a ration of spoiled food.


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Source: Houston Chronicle (Steffy, 2/20)

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Eagle Ford pay is high, but work can be fatal

The last time derrickman Julio Barrera spoke to his wife, he was worried and told her he didn't know what to do.

It was Sept. 1, 2009, and Barrera and his rig crew were having trouble in Webb County erecting and stabilizing a derrick, according to his wife, Claudia Hernandez, and inspection records on file with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, a federal agency that oversees worker safety.

“He called me and he told me that the tower was moving and he didn't want to go up it,” Hernandez recalled. “And they told him if he didn't go, he was going to lose his job. And he went. And then that's how he fell.”

The day after that phone call, Barrera climbed 25 feet up the derrick owned by Coastal Drilling Land Co. LLC to fix a locking pin in the metal frame.

The structure began swaying. Before he could react, the derrick tipped over and crashed to the rig floor, fatally crushing him under tons of metal.

Barrera was a 25-year-old father of two children — with another baby on the way.

Thanks to the Eagle Ford Shale and other lucrative oil and gas fields in South Texas, thousands of oil and gas workers are finding steady jobs and fat paychecks. But the boom has come at a steep cost.

Since 2009, at least 11 employees working for drilling companies and spinoff industries in Eagle Ford Shale counties have suffered horrific deaths that could have been prevented, according to OSHA investigations obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.

The files show federal inspectors found safety violations at the site of every fatality, and often concluded that companies hadn't taken adequate steps to keep their workers safe.

“For a lot of employers out there, they make a real effort,” said Michael Rivera, area director for OSHA's Corpus Christi office, which monitors most of the Eagle Ford Shale region south of San Antonio.

“I see a lot of good people working hard to keep things safe,” Rivera said. “That being said, there are those who just don't. There are those who kind of hurry, maybe take a shortcut. Not to hurt anybody or kill anybody. But time is money, right?”

Death toll

Most of the Eagle Ford accidents occurred at rig sites in a handful of counties in the southern portion of the shale where drilling is most prolific.

The 11 deaths are nearly a third of the 35 completed OSHA fatality investigations in Texas for the oil and gas industry since 2009.

The actual death toll most likely is higher, because OSHA's open investigations for recent accidents aren't available to the public. That makes it difficult to tell how many workers died last year, when drilling permits in the region skyrocketed to more than 4,100.

OSHA hasn't hired more inspectors to keep up with the upswing in drilling. Rivera oversees 10 compliance officers responsible for inspecting all types of businesses in a 30-county swath of South Texas. He's not openly complaining about a lack of resources, but the number of inspectors has remained the same since the discovery of the Eagle Ford Shale play in October 2008.

OSHA doesn't investigate transportation accidents on public roads, which killed 40 oil and gas workers in Texas from 2009 to 2011.

The agency focuses on workplace safety. At drilling sites, employees often work long hours under a tremendous sense of urgency around heavy, unforgiving equipment.

Many also work in remote areas, hours away from a hospital. In one case, paramedics faced delays in reaching an injured repairman at a rig site. Three hours after the accident, the worker finally arrived by helicopter at University Hospital in San Antonio. He died in the operating room.

In Barrera's case, an OSHA inspection determined that the rig manager and other supervisors knew the derrick's locking pins were malfunctioning, but the company “failed to adhere to its own” safety program.

Messages left with Coastal, based in Corpus Christi, weren't returned for this report.

Like many of the fatal accidents, Coastal's penalty of $5,600 for a “serious” OSHA violation was whittled down even further to $3,920. OSHA often agrees to settlements after companies protest, or mitigating factors are taken into account.

Initial fines against all companies for the 11 fatal accidents averaged $10,900 per death. OSHA ultimately agreed to cut penalties by nearly 45 percent to $6,100, records show.

Rivera said the safety of oil and gas workers is a top priority for his office. He acknowledged that some fines might not scare large firms, but added that most companies want to run a safe shop and avoid dealing with an OSHA investigation altogether.

Workplace deaths must be reported to OSHA within eight hours, and the agency investigates every incident. OSHA also requires companies to devise a plan to fix the problems that led to the accident.

“Is it a deterrent?” Rivera asked, referring to the fines. “I would say, if the penalty is not a deterrent, sometimes the violations themselves could be a deterrent to a lot of employers.”

'A dangerous job'

Drilling has always been a tough job, but longtime workers such as James May said oil and gas companies have grown more stringent about safety.

As May took a break outside a gas station about an hour south of San Antonio on Interstate 37, grimy pickups from drilling sites packed the parking lot.

Flares belched in the distance burning off excess natural gas.

May, who's worked in the industry since 1979, said the good old days weren't so good in the oil patch. Back then, companies had an “anything goes” attitude toward safety, May said.

“I'm glad things have changed to where they are now,” May said. “But it's still a dangerous job. Every aspect of it is pretty dangerous.”

In South Texas, one out of five fatalities OSHA has investigated in the past decade was at an oil and gas company.

Concerned by the death toll, OSHA regulators in Corpus Christi launched an initiative nearly 10 years ago called the South Texas Exploration and Production Safety Network. Membership of the STEPS Network is voluntary for companies seeking ways to improve their safety record.

“Basically the idea was to get the folks in oil and gas drilling, what they call the upstream part of the business, to get together and discuss safety issues and discuss how to keep the industry as safe as possible,” Rivera said.

One problem discussed at the network's monthly meetings is how the high demand for workers in the Eagle Ford Shale has produced a fresh crop of inexperienced new hires.

Another problem: A drilling site is usually a hectic place with a mix of workers from different companies.

“You might have a (drilling) mud contractor, a logging contractor and lots of different contractors doing different jobs out there,” Rivera said. “And the communication between all those different people can be a real issue.”

The STEPS Network in Corpus Christi has inspired similar efforts in other parts of the country. OSHA and STEPS are calling for an industry wide “stand down” in states that include Texas in which oil patch crews won't work on Feb. 28 in an effort to reduce accidents.

Making a difference?

Not every oil and gas company participates in the STEPS Network, and it's difficult to gauge how much members have learned from the program.

Since 2009, OSHA has opened two fatality investigations in South Texas of Patterson-UTI Drilling Co. LLC, a large drilling company based in Houston. One of the firm's safety directors had served on the executive committee of the STEPS Network.

On Nov. 27, 2010, at a Patterson derrick eight miles west of Cotulla, workers were assembling segments of a drive system that rotates the drill string when one of the heavy pieces of gear slipped off. Weighing about a ton, it fell 20 feet and killed Jeffrey Wayne Ferguson Jr., who had a wife and son.

“It's just a rat race out there in the shale,” said Corpus Christi lawyer Bill Edwards Sr., who represented the Ferguson family in their lawsuit against Patterson and other companies involved in the drilling operation. The case settled this year in a confidential agreement.

OSHA proposed fining Patterson more than $52,000, but that amount later was reduced to $21,000. It's the most expensive penalty issued by OSHA for an Eagle Ford Shale death since 2009.

In August 2011, OSHA opened another fatality investigation of an accident at a Patterson rig near Carrizo Springs. The agency hasn't released the full details.

Andy Hendricks, president and chief executive officer of Patterson's parent company, said the firm spent $150 million on training and safety improvements over the past decade. New employees must go through a three-week training program before they even step foot on a rig.

Hendricks declined to discuss the fatal accidents, but described them as tragedies that underscored the importance of continuing to strengthen Patterson's safety program.

“We've been doing a lot over the years to improve safety,” Hendricks said.

Hired last year, he said he wasn't familiar with the STEPS Network but added that his company's injury rates are lower than many competitors.

Rivera said it's hard to say whether the STEPS program improved the safety record at Patterson.

“That's a very large company, with lots of different divisions,” Rivera said. “I can't say one way or another whether STEPS actually had a concrete effect on the company or not. We're not there to shame people, and we're not there to push them away. Folks take what they want to take from those meetings.”

Irreplaceable

When OSHA created STEPS, officials said one worker death in the oil patch was one too many. But the inspection reports show how quickly a situation can turn deadly at a rig site.

On April 1, 2011, an unsecured, 8-pound metal bolt fell 142 feet off an Orion Drilling derrick near Catarina. Plummeting at an estimated speed of 65 mph, the bolt struck worker Michael Duckett on the head, killing him. His helmet didn't protect him.

“Orion management failed to inspect the derrick for loose tools or other materials which could possibly fall during the rigging-up process,” an OSHA report stated. The agency proposed fines of $6,300, which were later reduced to $4,725.

Messages left with Orion Drilling last week weren't returned.

On July 13, 2010, Justin Perez, 27, was working by himself for B&J Air and Pump in McMullen County when he stopped to check on a leaking pipe. He fell into a hidden wash-out — a water-filled hole in the ground. The water was scalding hot, and by the time Perez dragged himself out, he had suffered second-and third-degree burns.

Perez died 10 days later.

The family of Chandler “Chad” Bunting remembers him as tough former Marine who was no stranger to pain. In the military, he once suffered a broken foot but didn't get it treated until the day's mission was completed. A tattoo on his right arm said: “No regrets.”

In civilian life, Bunting worked for Tubal-Cain Hydraulic Solutions. On Jan. 11, 2012, Bunting, 26, was troubleshooting equipment at an Orion Drilling rig at Galvan Ranch in Webb County. The hydraulic system hadn't been depressurized and was operating at 1,500 pounds of pressure per square inch.

The equipment burst and Bunting's wrench slammed into his face and neck.

An Orion Drilling employee called 911 at 2:30 a.m. Bunting, conscious and in pain, waited for paramedics. But Cotulla EMS, in neighboring La Salle County, initially was sent to the wrong location.

When paramedics finally arrived, Bunting was suffering shortness of breath. A helicopter was dispatched to transport him but it had to land a mile away from the rig, causing further delays, records show.

Bunting finally arrived at the emergency room of University Hospital in San Antonio at 5:40 a.m. — more than three hours after the accident. His heart stopped beating. Medical personnel resuscitated him and rushed him to an operating room. His heart stopped again and Bunting couldn't be resuscitated, according to a Bexar County medical examiner's report.

Bunting left behind a young daughter and family members with unanswered questions.

“We had no idea the injuries would ultimately take Chad's life,” his family wrote on a memorial website.

An employee who answered the phone at Tubal-Cain declined to comment and the company's lawyer did not return messages.

An OSHA inspection concluded that emergency preparations at the remote rig site and the coordination between Orion Drilling and Tubal-Cain were both “lacking.” OSHA proposed fines of $9,800 for Tubal-Cain that were later reduced to $4,900.

Many families of workers who died on the job turn to the courts for recourse. After Barrera died in the derrick collapse, his widow sued Coastal and other companies tied to the drilling operation.

Claudia Hernandez had two sons and was pregnant with a third child when her husband died. She reached a confidential settlement with the companies.

“I did get money,” Hernandez said. “But they're not going to give me what my kids lost.”

She said the little things many families take for granted, like playing outside with the kids, are heart-wrenching. Hernandez can't stop thinking about her children growing up without their father.

“They go to a park or something and see other kids with their dads,” she said. “That's something I can't replace.”

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Source: My San Antonio (Tedesco, 2/17)

Monday, February 11, 2013

Compounding pharmacies have been linked to deaths, illnesses and safety failures for years

 Shoddy practices and unsanitary conditions at three large-scale specialty pharmacies have been tied to deaths and illnesses over the past decade, revealing that the serious safety lapses at a Massachusetts pharmacy linked to last fall’s deadly meningitis outbreak were not an isolated occurrence, records and interviews show.

The series of safety failures happened long before national attention focused on the New England Compounding Center, whose contaminated steroid shots were linked to 45 deaths and 651 illnesses.

A Washington Post analysis found that state and federal authorities did little to systematically inspect and correct hazards posed by specialty pharmacies, which custom-mix medications for individual patients, hospitals and clinics. In the lightly regulated industry, pharmacies were rarely punished even when their mistakes had lethal consequences.

The Post reviewed hundreds of records, including lawsuits and Food and Drug Administration documents, and interviewed dozens of government and industry officials. The review found serious problems at three of 15 large-scale compounding pharmacies that dominate the industry. These multimillion-dollar companies mass-produce medications and ship them across state lines, often without individual patient prescriptions.

Three of the firms, in addition to the NECC, have experienced significant safety problems over the past decade that were tied to at least 39 illnesses. Two companies’ missteps were linked to at least six deaths. The problems included medications that were too potent or laced with bacteria.

One of the three firms identified by The Post — the California-based Central Admixture Pharmacy Services — is under investigation at its Massachusetts facility by the FDA, according to industry and government officials.

Executives at CAPS, a pioneer and among the largest manufacturing-style compounders, declined to comment on the investigation, which has not been previously disclosed. Federal officials would not discuss the probe, which was triggered by their ongoing investigation of the NECC and a sister company, Ameridose.

Illinois-based PharMEDium Services and Texas-based ApotheCure also had serious deficiencies, records show.

Officials at CAPS, PharMEDium and ApotheCure said their companies produce high-quality products and are continuously upgrading operations to make them safe.

But when regulators have visited the firms after patient illnesses or deaths, they have sometimes found alarming conditions.

“The things they saw, they would chill your bones,” said cardiologist John Armitage, regarding the FDA’s 2005 investigation of several CAPS facilities after some of his patients died or became gravely ill.

Today, compounders supply about 40 percent of all intravenous medications used in hospitals, up from 16 percent a decade ago, according to industry estimates. They make some of the highest-risk drugs available, including steroid injections like the ones linked to the meningitis outbreak. Yet they are not required to follow the safety rules that apply to commercial drugmakers.

Government regulators have failed to rein in reckless operators. State pharmacy boards, which have the primary responsibility for policing the industry, have an uneven enforcement record.

The FDA’s attempts to use its power have been thwarted by companies relying on gaps in the law and conflicting court rulings. The companies have fought enforcement orders and kept the agency out of their facilities. Some members of Congress have sought to beef up the agency’s authority, but the industry has successfully killed those efforts.

“You are seeing a bunch of people trying to do their best in a system that is legally and factually complicated,” said Howard Sklamberg, director of compliance for the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

The FDA is again pressing Congress for greater powers.

CAPS In 1991, health-care entrepreneur Jim Sweeney became one of the original architects for the modern compounding industry when he persuaded a Southern California hospital to outsource some of its pharmacy work to him.

Across the country, nurses had made fatal errors mixing solutions in patients’ rooms, and hospital pharmacies were struggling with bacterial growths in their own drug therapies. Hospitals adopted new safety standards, but they were costly. At the City of Hope hospital, officials turned to Sweeney and CAPS “strictly to save money,” said Dale Adams, chief pharmacy officer.

Sweeney outfitted a double-wide trailer in the hospital parking lot, hired a team of pharmacists and began making intravenous nutritional supplements for its cancer patients. Before long, CAPS was expanding to other hospitals and making intravenous drugs.

“We typically would approach hospitals and ask, ‘What are the high-risk things you are making? How would you like us to do that for you?’ ” said Eric Steen, whom Sweeney hired from the drugmaker Baxter and made president. Sweeney sold the company in 1994.

One of the drugs in big demand was cardioplegia, a solution used in open-heart surgery to stop and restart the heart. The drug often is made from ingredients that are not sterile, so compounders must successfully sterilize them so it can be safely injected into the coronary arteries.

The pharmacies, however, cannot be compelled to test each lot or batch to check for sterility and proper potency.

In 2004, the company’s Pittsburgh facility prepared cardioplegia for Alycia Hartzell, a 2-year-old who was undergoing open-heart surgery. According to a 2007 lawsuit filed against CAPS by Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, the active ingredients and the sodium strengths were too strong and “the use of the CAPS cardioplegia solution led to a brain bleed, and severe permanent injuries.”

Daniel Stefko, a lawyer for the hospital, said the FDA never investigated the episode. “I remember being sort of surprised to find that there was this phenomenon out there, where if I ordered something from Pfizer, it was FDA-regulated, but if I ordered basically the same thing from a compounding pharmacy, the rules were not there.”

CAPS settled with Children’s Hospital for an undisclosed amount. The Hartzell family, which sued the hospital, settled with it for an undisclosed amount. The girl’s mother, Amanda Hartzell, said she could not comment because of a confidentiality agreement. CAPS and parent company B. Braun Medical declined to comment.

A year later, CAPS shipped batches of cardioplegia from its facility in Lanham, Md., to Mary Washington Hospital, a hospital in Fredericksburg, records show.

Shortly thereafter, two patients who had undergone open-heart surgery had a devastating infection and died. Nine other heart patients ended up in the intensive-care unit for extended stays.

“It’s normal for people to have an inflammatory response following open-heart surgery, but to have a severe response that results in multi-organ failure — that’s rare,” said John Armitage, who ran the cardiac unit and now lives in Oregon. “We started changing everything we could think of. Nothing seemed to work.”

In September 2005, cardiovascular specialists staged a mock surgery and found the cardioplegia was contaminated with bacteria, according to a hospital analysis.

They repeated the mock surgery to make sure no other factors were contributing to the crisis. This time, the full cardiac team joined in, scrubbing their hands, slipping on sterile gowns, masks and gloves as they walked through each step of an operation while the hospital’s infection-control staff watched. The only thing missing was a patient.

The cardioplegia seemed to be the only problem, the state health department concluded.

When the FDA was notified, Armitage said, it took days for investigators to arrive, and they wouldn’t tell the hospital what they were finding out about the CAPS Lanham facility.

“They said, ‘We are not a police agency,’ ” Armitage said. The hospital filed a Freedom of Information Act request and received the FDA inspection report about six months later.

The FDA found 17 safety violations at the Lanham facility. Cardioplegia was tainted with the species of bacteria that matched those found at Mary Washington. Internal tests showed “the presence of bacteria in a water container used for cleaning. . . . Likewise, sterility testing demonstrated similar bacteria in its drug products.” The Maryland Board of Pharmacy suspended the Lanham facility’s license for two months.

The FDA also found dozens of problems at CAPS’s facilities in Alabama, Pennsylvania and Missouri.

Steen, who left CAPS last year to start his own medical consulting firm, said the cause of the illnesses remains a “mystery.” He noted that the facility sent the drug to a number of other hospitals that didn’t have any problems.

That might have been because Mary Washington had ordered a special formula, said Diane Woolard, director of the Division of Surveillance and Investigation with the Virginia Health Department. “It may have been a contaminated element in those ingredients,” she said.

Officials at CAPS, which has 25 locations and $500 million in annual sales, would not comment on the 2005 event. In an e-mail statement, Mike Koch, a vice president, said, “CAPS is committed to offering the highest quality admixture service to our customers and their patients.”

PharMEDium Services

In 2007, a team of investigators from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued an unusually blunt warning to hospitals and doctors: Compounded drugs had a higher risk of contamination than commercially manufactured drugs, and compounding pharmacies had “generally lower quality-control standards than pharmaceutical manufacturers.”

The warning, which appeared in a medical journal, stemmed from a 2005 multi-state outbreak involving another big compounder, PharMEDium Services of Lake Forest, Ill.

In January 2005, six cardiac patients at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center came down with a rare bacterial infection. Doctors suspected contaminated magnesium sulfate made by PharMEDium. The intravenous solution is widely used to steady the heartbeat after surgery and to treat a life-threatening condition of pregnancy called pre-eclampsia.

But neither the hospital nor PharMEDium’s Houston plant that made the drug had any solution left to test. Compounders are not required to keep samples for testing later on in case patients get sick.

Federal officials were stymied until they learned five heart patients in New Jersey had developed the same infection, also after receiving magnesium sulfate made by PharMEDium. The New Jersey hospital had bags of solution left, and tests confirmed the rare bacterial strain in the bags matched that of all patients in Los Angeles and New Jersey.

“It was almost luck that we were able to make this match,” said Esther Tan, part of the CDC team that investigated the outbreak.

Investigators said the contamination could have come from the hands of technicians who made the bags of solution. No source was identified.

One patient, Joe Chacon, a heavy-equipment operator in Los Angeles, said he was infected Jan. 12, 2005, at the Kaiser hospital during heart surgery. He became feverish, required a ventilator to breathe and eventually needed to have his pacemaker removed because of concerns about a recurrence of infection, according to his civil suit against PharMEDium.

“I was in the hospital for quite a while,” said Chacon, now 59. He said he wasn’t able to go back to work. The company settled for $25,000, his wife, Rachelle Chacon, said.

All told, at least 18 people in five states were sickened.

From 2005 to 2011, hospitals and patients raised other concerns about PharMEDium medications. In 2006, the company recalled pain medication after human error led to mislabeled drugs at its Mississippi plant, according to FDA records and company officials. An Arizona man lost consciousness after receiving morphine sulfate rather than the less powerful fentanyl citrate. In 2009, a similar incident occurred at the same plant, according to FDA records.

After the bacterial outbreak, the FDA inspected the Houston plant and found staff had failed to fully investigate nine instances in the months before the outbreak where PharMEDium’s own monitoring showed higher-than- allowed levels of “viable microorganisms,” according to FDA records.

The company increased environmental testing and training, officials said in an interview. The firm also developed a special bar-code-scanning technology to minimizes manual errors, the company said. The company said that it’s not practical to keep samples because it makes small batches of drugs with short expiration dates.

Founded in 2003, PharMEDium has four plants and annual sales of more than $100 million, officials said. The company says it uses only sterile, FDA-approved ingredients for the intravenous and epidural medications it supplies to more than 2,000 hospitals, including Johns Hopkins Hospital.

Company President Rich Kruzynski said the incidents are a fraction of the “tens of thousands of batches” provided to hospitals. The record, he said, demonstrates PharMEDium’s commitment to be the industry’s “gold standard” for quality, patient safety and regulatory compliance.

ApotheCure

While many compounding pharmacies were focusing on hospitals, others were catering to physicians who practiced experimental medicine.

One of the rising stars was Texas-based ApotheCure, which was cited by celebrity Suzanne Somers in her 2005 bestselling book, “The Sexy Years,” which extolled the anti-aging benefits of customized hormone therapies.

About the same time, ApotheCure’s owner, Gary Osborn, was quoted in alternative magazines and wrote on his company’s Web site about the benefits of using gout medication for pain relief and using lipids in “fat-dissolving” solutions. He also promoted chelation therapy, which removes heavy metals from the body, as a treatment for autism.

As ApotheCure branched out, nearly doubling its $6 million in annual sales during the mid- to late 2000s, patients began getting ill after using some of its products. FDA records from a 2007 inspection show ApotheCure did not alert the agency about many of the incidents.

However, the FDA was notified by local health officials about a 2004 episode in which nine people in Pennsylvania got sick after receiving infusions of an ApotheCure solution that the pharmacy said would dissolve fat, records show. Symptoms included abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and renal complications, according to state health records.

When FDA officials showed up to investigate the Dallas facility that had made the solution, owner Osborn turned them away, saying they needed an inspection warrant, FDA and court records show. They never returned with one, the records show.

FDA officials said that although they did not secure a warrant, they worked with Texas State Board of Pharmacy officials who inspected the facility. The state board did not take any disciplinary actions, said Allison Benz, the board’s director of professional services.

In 2005, a 5-year-old autistic boy died after being treated with ApotheCure’s chelation compound. Using this treatment for autism “is not evidence-based, and it has the potential for being very toxic and fatal,” said FDA’s Janet Woodcock, director of the agency’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

The company kept promoting chelation therapy, records show. Osborn did not make any public statements about the incident at the time and did not respond to The Post’s requests for comment.

Two years later, three patients at an Oregon pain clinic died after injections of ApotheCure-compounded colchicine, a medication for gout marketed by alternative compounding pharmacies for neck and back pain. The solution was eight times as strong as what was ordered by the treating physician, records show.

The Oregon state attorney general’s office investigated the company after the three deaths. David Hart, who prosecuted the case against ApotheCure for the attorney general’s office, said he thinks the FDA missed a critical opportunity in 2004 when it didn’t get the search warrant.

“Arguably, if action had been taken earlier by the FDA, this could have been prevented,” he said.

When the FDA was notified of the 2007 deaths, this time the agency got a warrant for the facility. The agency identified 13 deficiencies and Texas authorities found 80 deficiencies and violations, records show.

In its report, the FDA noted that products were not tested for potency prior to shipping — something that could have prevented the deaths. But that didn’t violate the law because testing for potency and sterility is not required of compounders, noted ApotheCure attorney James J. Doyle III in a written comment.

The agency’s and state board’s findings became the backbone for state complaints in Texas and Oregon and a Justice Department lawsuit filed against Osborn and his company, state and federal records show.

At the time of the fatal incidents, Osborn told the Associated Press that the colchicine mishap was due to “human error.” Osborn declined interview requests from The Post. His attorney, Lawrence J. Friedman, said he thinks his client was unfairly singled out.

“They decided to make an example out of ApotheCure,” Friedman said.

After the 2007 incident, Friedman said, his client hired consultants and “doubled, even tripled,” safety precautions.

However, a Dec. 20, 2010, internal audit of ApotheCure, obtained by The Post, showed that three years after the FDA investigated, the pharmacy was still riddled with unsanitary conditions.

Insect body parts were found in “clean rooms” where sterile products were compounded. A suspended ceiling, with exposed pipe, wiring and duct work, allowed “contaminants to flow over the sterile suite and fall through the suspended ceiling.”

The Texas pharmacy board returned last year and found a few minor problems. All of them have since been corrected, said Gay Dodson, the board’s executive director.

In 2012, Osborn pleaded guilty to misdemeanor criminal violations of the federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act for the colchicine-related deaths. Osborn was ordered to pay a combined $400,000 in fines to settle the DOJ, Texas and Oregon complaints directed at him and his company. The terms of settlements with victims’ families are confidential.

Osborn’s company — which has about $10 million in annual sales — is still in operation.

“People make mistakes, but there is nobody watching over these people,” said Christopher Long, whose 56-year-old mother died after receiving the toxic colchicine made by ApotheCure. “The regulatory piece of this, nothing has changed. I realize it takes a long time to rein things in, but my mother is dead, ApotheCure is still in operation and people have died again.”

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Source: Washington Post (AP, 2/7)

Monday, February 4, 2013

Doctors tied to multiple overdoses

More than a dozen Houston-area physicians have lost three or more patients to accidental prescription overdoses in recent years — including doctors accused of running pill mills and some of the state’s top prescribers of pain pills and anti-anxiety drugs, according to a Houston Chronicle analysis.

Doctors previously targeted for disciplinary action by the state medical board for pill mill activity or prescription-related problems were often the sources of drugs found at multiple death sites, a review of medicines given to more than 200 people who accidentally overdosed in Harris County in 2008 and 2009 shows.

However, some local physicians with high volume practices — and no association with pill mills — who specialize in pain management or psychiatry also prescribed medicines found at multiple deaths.

Harris County is considered a national hub for prescription overdose deaths and for pill mills.

Many local deaths involve people who fatally ingested cocktails of medicines featuring opioid pain drugs combined with anti-anxiety medicines like alprazolam (Xanax), records show. Often they took more than prescribed or mixed drugs with alcohol.

The Chronicle’s findings on the source of prescriptions were based on inventories of medications found in homes of local overdose victims. In home deaths, Harris County medical examiner’s investigators recorded types, amounts and prescribers for drugs stored in bedside tables, closets or still clutched in the hands of the dead.

At least three doctors accused of operating pill mills wrote prescriptions found at three or more home deaths.

‘They leave happier’

Dr. Ruth Atlas, a Houston pediatric neurologist, prescribed medicines to four people who died in 2008 and 2009, records show. For years, Atlas has run a high-volume practice that attracted more than 700 patients a year to her clinics, medical board records show. She had her license temporarily restricted — barred from prescribing controlled substances — by the Texas Medical Board in December. A board attorney described her practice as exhibiting “hallmarks of a pill mill, the knowing scheme to distribute for profit narcotics and dangerous drugs through a known medical office facade.”

Atlas told the board her chronic pain patients came at least once a month for rechecks and prescriptions.

“I have patients who come in sad,” she testified. “They say they always look forward to coming into the office … and they leave happier.”

In a letter, her attorney Ace Pickens said “patient privilege” and “matters in litigation” made it inappropriate for Atlas to respond to the Chronicle.

Dr. Christina Clardy, who faces federal prosecution for fraud and conspiracy charges revealed after one of her alleged pill mills burned in a 2010 arson, was identified as treating physician or prescriber in three deaths. Chris Downey, her Houston criminal defense attorney, said Clardy, whose medical license was suspended in 2010, no longer has access to practice records and could not confirm whether she’d ever seen patients who overdosed.

“As you might imagine given the status of her criminal case, she can’t say much,” he said. “While we have been looking in these various clinics both on the state and federal side we have found multiple instances of her signature being forged. ”

Three others who died in accidental overdoses got prescriptions signed by Dr. Gerald Ratinov, a 76-year-old neurologist based in downtown Houston who formerly served as medical director at several so-called pill mills. He faces an on-going medical board disciplinary inquiry involving complaints about those clinics.

Ratinov has not been charged with any crime, but hired a Houston criminal defense attorney to represent him and is cooperating in an ongoing pain clinic probe. Lawyer Robert J. Fickman declined to comment on patients’ deaths but said Ratinov has disassociated himself from pain clinics.

1,751 Xanax prescriptions

The analysis also showed doctors not associated with pill mills prescribed drugs found at multiple overdose sites.

Two Houston doctors prescribed medicine to six patients who accidentally overdosed in 2008 and 2009, the analysis showed. Both practice in high-volume clinics and rank among the state’s top publicly paid prescribers of common pain or anti-anxiety drugs, Medicare and Medicaid data for 2008-2010 shows.

Public records show that one of them, psychiatrist Dr. Guruswami Ravichandran, is the state’s leading prescriber of the anti-anxiety drug Xanax, also called alprazolam. Last year Medicare and Medicaid was billed for 1,751 Xanax prescriptions for 10,142 of his patients for a total of $180,762.

By comparison, Texas’ second-ranked Xanax provider prescribed less than a third as much and billed for $29,167.

Ravichandran operates the Shamrock Clinic in southwest Houston — where his patients regularly wait hours and lines spill out into the halls. His office displays signs about Xanax and other medicines, including warnings not to resell or share prescription drugs. Ravichandran did not respond to phone calls, emails and a letter hand-delivered to his clinic. He was disciplined by the medical board in 2002 for “unprofessional or dishonorable conduct” and in 2007 for inadequate record keeping.

One with spotless record

Another doctor who had six patients overdose in 2008 and 2009, Dr. Patricia Salvato, has no disciplinary history. In fact, though Salvato has faced criticism for her prescribing practices, she emerged with a spotless record after a six-month review by the Texas Medical Board in response to a pharmacist’s complaint. Board investigators found Salvato “met or exceeded the standard of care in treatment of chronic pain” for the five patients whose case files were examined, according to records she showed the Chronicle.

Salvato annually treats 3,000 patients, including AIDS patients and about 600 chronic pain sufferers. She ranks in the state’s top 50 Medicare and Medicaid prescribers for the pain killer hydrocodone and the anti-anxiety drug Xanax.

Certified as a specialist in addiction medicine and in pain management, Salvato said in an interview she was troubled and saddened by the recent deaths of six patients, two of whom she’d treated for more than 20 years. Salvato said she takes many precautions to attempt to detect potentially dangerous addictions and prevent overdoses, including requiring patients to complete pain contracts and take random drug screenings.

She urged anyone concerned about loved ones’ medications or addictions to share information with doctors — providing information can help save lives.

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Source: Houston Chronicle(Olsen, 3/30)