By Marshall Allen
Las Vegas Sun
Saturday, Feb. 12, 2011, 2 a.m.
A nationally known pain specialist says she's become the target of intimidation for speaking out against a Henderson doctor who has been linked by authorities to multiple deaths and lost his license to prescribe controlled substances.
Dr. Andrea Trescot, a Jacksonville, Fla., specialist and past president of the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians, said her legal fees to fight a defamation lawsuit filed by Dr. Kevin Buckwalter are at least $20,000.
"I feel this is retaliation and an effort to intimidate a witness," Trescot said.
After Trescot commented on Buckwalter's practices in Las Vegas Sun articles in 2008, the Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners and the Drug Enforcement Administration stripped him of his license to prescribe controlled substances, saying at least eight of his patients had died since 2005 from drugs he prescribed.
"Unfortunately, there are a few doctors using their position of trust in our communities to prey on those who are vulnerable to the abuse of these drugs," Timothy Landrum, a DEA special agent, said at the time.
Buckwalter, a family physician who is not practicing, is contesting the medical board and DEA decisions.
Bryce Buckwalter, the doctor's brother and attorney, said Trescot should be held accountable for her comments.
"She said defamatory statements, so I'm going to go after her and see what the jury says," he said.
The Sun was researching a story about Buckwalter's medical practice and sought experts to review his treatment of patients who claimed they had become addicted to narcotics under his care. The medical records of some patients showed they had overdosed and died from the powerful pills. Others, whose records showed they had been prescribed large quantities of narcotics by Buckwalter, told the Sun the drugs had ruined their lives.
Four pain specialists said in the Sun's stories Buckwalter's prescription of the narcotics appeared to be reckless and had no basis in standard medical practice, based on the patient records they reviewed. Trescot and Dr. David Kloth of Danbury, Conn., also a nationally recognized pain specialist, were the only two to speak on the record. Kloth is not being sued by Buckwalter.
In the first story the Sun wrote about Buckwalter, published in September 2008, Trescot, who wrote a guide for prescribing opiates for the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians, reviewed the records of a Las Vegas businessman who was receiving up to 1,100 narcotic doses a month from Buckwalter. Trescot said the records showed:
Read More About Doctor Linked to Patient Deaths Suing out of Spite, Witness Says...
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