
By Marshall Allen
Las Vegas Sun
Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008, 2 a.m.
A Las Vegas man says his Henderson physician turned him into a drug addict and caused him to overdose by prescribing him as many as 1,170 narcotic painkillers in a single month.
The prescriptions by Dr. Kevin Buckwalter were so extreme, and the documentation so bad, that four pain management experts who examined the patient's medical records at the Sun's request say the overprescribing could constitute malpractice and violations of law.
Buckwalter's prescribing habits have been the subject of at least one previous investigation by the Nevada Medical Examiners Board, according to medical board correspondence sent to the family of a different patient who filed a complaint against him. And he's the subject of a current investigation by the board, according to correspondence by investigators.
The patient, Michael Hammond, a Las Vegas business executive, is not the only person to complain about Buckwalter.
The Sun has spoken with the families of two people, in addition to Hammond, who have overdosed while under Buckwalter's care. Their claims are supported by medical records and death certificates.
The pain management doctors who analyzed Buckwalter's care said there was no documented evidence to justify the amount of narcotic medicines Buckwalter prescribed to Hammond, based on their review of all of the patient's records involving Buckwalter.
They all agreed that Buckwalter should be investigated.
"I'm not sure this guy belongs practicing medicine - and certainly not pain management - if this is representative of his care," said Dr. David Kloth, a Connecticut specialist who is a past president of the American Society of Intervention Pain Physicians.
Kloth said the amount of painkillers prescribed for the patient might be appropriate if the patient were dying of cancer. But Hammond did not have cancer.
Hammond contacted the Sun after the paper published a series of stories highlighting Nevada's high per capita rate of narcotics use.
The growing consumption is blamed in part on drug addicts who "doctor shop" - visit multiple physicians with complaints of pain to score drugs. But the medical community is concerned, too, about doctors who overprescribe narcotics. Medical schools do little to train doctors in prescribing narcotics, and many primary care physicians do not understand them, experts said.
To combat drug abuse, the Nevada Pharmacy Board maintains a database detailing every prescription in the state for certain controlled substances. The database is intended to flag doctor shoppers, not police the prescribing habits of physicians.
By law, patients have a right to their own prescription and medical records, so Hammond was able to request them from the Pharmacy Board and Buckwalter so the Sun could verify his claims.
Hammond said he had selected Buckwalter as his primary care physician. After a neck injury the doctor began an intense regimen of painkillers, including hydrocodone and oxycodone, without explaining their potential for addiction and overdose, Hammond said.
Hammond said that within months, he had no more pain complaints - but by then was addicted to the drugs. Hammond says the change was subtle, and that he didn't realize he was addicted to the pills until he had been taking them for many months. He says he took them because they made him feel good, and he trusted the doctor.
"I didn't know what I was taking," Hammond said. "I should've googled it. I blame nobody but myself."
Hammond is more upset about this: Buckwalter's prescriptions continued even after he nearly died from an overdose of the pills in August 2007.
Pharmacy records show that Buckwalter prescribed medications to Hammond from January 2005 to June 2008. In that period he was prescribed about 1,530 doses of alprazolam, an anti-anxiety drug known by the brand name Xanax; 11,350 oxycodone, many of them under the brand name Endocet; 5,740 hydrocodone pills; and 1,440 doses of hydromorphone, a type of morphine.
In June 2007, Hammond was prescribed 1,290 pills - a daily average of 34 narcotic painkillers, five Xanaxes, three Somas, a muscle relaxer, and one Ambien, a sleep aid.
Hammond insists he was taking the drugs at the levels prescribed by Buckwalter.
"I was taking his prescriptions on his word," Hammond said. "He's the professional. I trusted him."
Buckwalter graduated with a medical degree from Ross University in the West Indies in 1993. In 1997 he received his Nevada medical license to practice pediatrics and family medicine. He has no record of being disciplined.
The newspaper made multiple visits to Buckwalter's office on St. Rose Parkway in Henderson and delivered a letter that included Hammond's name and the allegations in this story.
Bryce Buckwalter, the doctor's brother and attorney, would not comment other than to say Buckwalter had rendered the appropriate treatment for the symptoms Hammond presented.
The experts who reviewed Hammond's medical records at the Sun's request were unanimous in their conclusions, which they expressed with varying degrees of alarm.
Dr. Andrea Trescot, a Florida pain specialist who wrote a guide for prescribing opiates for the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians, said Hammond may have grounds to sue Buckwalter.
The records, Trescot said, show:
Read More About One Reason Behind Nevada’s Problem with Narcotic Painkillers...
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