|
Lindsey Nair;
The Roanoke Times; 2006-03-02. Posted: 2006-03-02
[Identifier:
http://www.doctordeluca.com/Library/WOD/Cheek-AgentsRaid06.htm]
[Source:
http://www.roanoke.com/news/roanoke/wb/wb/xp-54971]
Related resources:
Drug War Journalism and Advocacy archives ; Knox/Boone
archives
See also:
Self-Absorbed Prosecutor [Brownlee] Goes Too Far -
Donna Knox, Roanoke Times, 2006
Drugs
and Drug Policy
- Bill Marcus,
Deputy Attorney General - CA (Retired 2001); Narc Officer, 6(5), 23-29, 1989
Drug Crime Is a Source of Abused Pain Medications -
Joranson and Gilson, J. Pain Symptom Management, 30(4): 299-301, 2005
War on Doctors and Pain Crisis Weekly RSS Update - Feed
URL:
HTML
view:

|
|
A New River Valley pain doctor says her office
was raided Tuesday afternoon by more than a dozen law enforcement agents who
"documented the contents of every box and file drawer" and who said their search
warrant was Medicaid-related.
Although no federal agency would confirm an investigation of Linda Cheek's
practice at New River Medical Associates in Dublin, Capt. George Austin with the
Virginia State Police said his agency assisted in the execution of a search
warrant Tuesday in Pulaski County.
Austin referred questions to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in
Roanoke, which declined to comment.
Heidi Coy, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in
Roanoke, would neither confirm nor deny an investigation.
"Charges have not been filed, but the justification for the search warrant was
billing," Cheek, 57, wrote in an e-mail to The Roanoke Times. "The hidden agenda
is pain management."
According to Cheek, she is a primary care physician who has been in practice for
10 years.
She took up alternative medicine in 2000, first practicing acupuncture, which
led to an interest in pain management.
Cheek said she has treated pain for the past six years and for three of those
years has used multidisciplinary techniques such as psychiatric counseling and
"cleansing," a procedure that removes toxins from the body.
When she asked insurance companies about how to bill some of those treatments,
Cheek said, she was told to simply do it the best way she could, and see what
happened. She said she has only billed insurance or state and federal health
care programs for evaluation and management of the related health problem,
physical therapy, electrical therapy and hypnosis.
Cheek said it is her opinion that the whole coding system is unaccommodating to
alternative medicine specialists.
"I have to be true to the science more than I have to be true to the
government," she said.
Cheek said she does prescribe Schedule II painkillers such as OxyContin and
methadone, and her two nurse practitioners cannot prescribe pain medication so
she signs their prescriptions for them. She added that it probably looks on
record as though she prescribes three times what a normal doctor would
prescribe.
Although Cheek suggests that the investigation is about her pain practice, there
is no evidence to suggest it played a role in the raid.
Dozens of doctors across the country have faced charges in connection with their
prescribing practices, including former Roanoke pain doctor Cecil Knox. Once
facing more than 300 charges, Knox was partially acquitted in 2003 by a jury
that was hung on the remaining charges.
Knox pleaded guilty to three felonies in October and was sentenced in January to
five years' probation. He also voluntarily gave up his license to practice
medicine.
[END]
|