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MERCHANTVILLE, N.J. Dr. Lance L. Gooberman has devoted his medical practice to
perfecting "rapid opiate detoxification," designed to reduce the agony of drug
withdrawal and get more addicts into recovery.
Himself a recovering addict long drug-free, Gooberman says his practice - which,
unlike similar rapid-detox programs, doesn't require a hospital stay - has
successfully detoxified about 2,350 patients over seven years and guided them
into long-term recovery programs.
But over four years, seven of his patients died within days of the procedure.
Gooberman says they had undetected heart problems or took cocaine, triggering a
heart attack.
In a civil trial beginning Wednesday, state regulators will try to strip the
medical licenses of Gooberman and his former employee, Dr. David Bradway.
"We just want to make sure these 'cutting-edge treatments' aren't cutting off
life," says Mark Herr, director of New Jersey's Division of Consumer Affairs,
which oversees the state board regulating physicians.
Gooberman and his attorney, John Sitzler, have lined up medical experts to
testify that accepted medical standards were followed and that Gooberman's
procedure was not the cause of any patient's death.
Sitzler says their patients' death rate was just 0.3%, lower than for many
surgical procedures, and that outpatient procedures involving anesthesia are
commonly performed in physicians' offices.
Procedure May Cause Severe Physical Stress
Gooberman's program, U.S. Detox Inc., uses medications to rapidly flush the
opiate drugs--heroin, morphine, methadone and prescription painkillers--out of
addicts' bodies to ease withdrawal symptoms such as diarrhea and tremors. The
patients are anesthetized during the approximately four-hour procedure in his
office.
He then implants a pellet of medicine in the abdomen that prevents patients from
"getting high" if they take opiate drugs during the crucial first two months of
recovery. "I'm just trying to come up with a better way to do detox," Gooberman
says.
Gooberman, 49, for years was addicted to the stimulant methamphetamine, but he
says he has been drug-free for 14 years after a six-week stay in a hospital
psychiatric unit triggered by a drug binge.
Rapid opiate detoxification was first performed in the late 1980s in Europe.
Gooberman and other doctors who pioneered it in this country have appeared on
television talk shows praising the method. The procedure also has been depicted
on TV medical dramas.
At least 12 other U.S. physicians perform variations on rapid detox, but in a
hospital and with an overnight stay required.
Some have published articles in medical journals indicating many more patients
were drug-free after six months than with traditional detoxification programs.
And a handful of insurance plans have begun paying for the procedure.
But even doctors who perform rapid detoxification say it severely stresses
addicts' ravaged bodies, and at least a dozen of the thousands of American and
European patients who underwent the procedure in a hospital also died. The
slower, traditional detoxification and the use of methadone maintenance therapy
have been documented to kill some patients as well.
New Jersey's lawyers are expected to stress that Gooberman and Bradway are the
only doctors known to perform detoxification as an outpatient procedure.
The state alleges, among other things, that the doctors did not have
sufficiently trained support staff and adequate emergency equipment, warn
patients enough about the method's risks or properly instruct the caregiver
taking the patient home. The doctors deny all of that.
Experts Say More Research Is Needed
Rapid opiate detoxification has been approved by the professional organization
for doctors in their specialty, the American Society for Addiction Medicine, as
long as it's "performed by adequately trained staff with access to appropriate
medical equipment," according to the society's executive vice president, James
F. Callahan.
Former society president Dr. David E. Smith, a San Francisco addiction
specialist, says he regards Gooberman's program as the best in the country.
Patients treated by Gooberman and Bradway have promised to testify on the
doctors' behalf.
Bennett Oppenheim, a psychologist who once oversaw treatment at several U.S.
rapid detox centers run by a for-profit company, says he now believes the
procedure should be done in hospitals, not in for-profit centers.
Experts agree that more research is needed. Under a grant from the National
Institute on Drug Abuse, a three-year national trial comparing rapid detox with
two forms of slow detoxification began in September.
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