Archive | December, 2009

Seeking Stronger Physician-Patient Relationships

By Gene Davis, DENVER DAILY NEWS
The Colorado Medical Society is siding with the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment in their charge for requiring a stronger bona fide physician-patient relationship before a doctor certifies someone for medical marijuana.
Following the release of data showing that a small minority of doctors is responsible for recommending medical marijuana to a vast majority of patients, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment last week called on lawmakers to craft legislation that would crack down on so-called fraud and abuse.
As of last Tuesday, a total of 820 licensed physicians had authorized medical marijuana for 15,800 patients, according to the Medical Marijuana Registry. Of those 820 physicians, only 15 accounted for 73 percent of total patients, and five had authorized 49 percent of all recommendations. There are currently around 29,000 people who have submitted the necessary applications to be included on the state’s medical marijuana.
“It is concerning to us that a handful of physicians have certified the majority of medical marijuana patients, and it seems indicative of the ‘wild west’ nature of the business that has sprung up,” said Edie Sonn, senior director of the Colorado Medical Society.
Sonn said that the Colorado Medical Society, the group that advocates for doctors and patients, is in the process of formulating guiding principles to shape their position on proposed medical marijuana regulation. Sonn said the group is looking at the guiding principles from the standpoint of what’s best to protect patient safety.
“From that basis, then, requiring a bona fide physician-patient relationship before certifying someone as needing medical marijuana is appropriate, logical, and good for patients,” he said.
The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) believes that the few doctors providing the majority of medical marijuana recommendations raises concern about the medical care being provided to patients. In turn, the department is pushing to make statutory language changes that would clarify what constitutes a bona fide physician-patient relationship.
“These figures are representative of the concerns we have about whether some physicians really have a bona fide physician-patient relationship, as required in the constitution, with those for whom they are authorizing the use of marijuana,” said a statement last week from Chief Medical Officer Ned Calonge.
Meanwhile, advocates for medical marijuana slammed the CDPHE for taking the wrong approach.
Laura Kriho of the Cannabis Therapy Institute argued that just as doctors in Colorado specialize in niche procedures like brain surgery, others are finding a niche working with medical marijuana patients.
“Why should they be punished for this?” she said.
Additionally, she believes that asking lawmakers to crack down on so-called abuses of the doctor-patient relationship will scare an already hesitant medical community away from providing recommendations for the medicine, leaving patients with few places to turn.
“Ideas like this will only further serve to isolate and alienate patients and to scare physicians into not writing recommendations, so there will be even fewer physicians in the future who will be willing to work with medical marijuana patients,” she said. “It is bad policy and bad medicine.”
Under the CDPHE’s recommendations, a physician would have to have an ongoing relationship with a patient, do a complete assessment of a patient’s medical history and perform follow-up care. A doctor must also be in good standing and not have had their federal Drug Enforcement Administration registration revoked or suspended, and not receive any money from a medical marijuana dispensary of primary caregiver.
If a physician didn’t follow those requirements, they would be referred to the Colorado Board of Medical Examiners for further investigation.
“Many of these requirements parallel federal laws designed to provide protection from economic conflicts of interest that may arise when a physician stands to benefit directly from the sale of a medication or service that he or she prescribes,” said a statement from Calonge.

Distributed by Colorado Capitol Reporters

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Bills Could Tone Down New Late Fees for Auto Registration

Lawmakers are introducing bills next year that tinker with the mandatory late-fee provision of a measure that increased auto-registration fees. Some Coloradans were stunned to discover they owed as much as $100 for being tardy, The Denver Post reports.

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Penry: I Won’t Run For Lieutenant Governor, Either

State Sen. Josh Penry, R-Grand Junction, said he isn’t interested in joining the ticket of his onetime rival, Scott McInnis, as the candidate for lieutenant governor. “If I were hell-bent on being on the ticket, I’d still be in the race,” Penry told the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel last week when asked about reports that he might be interested in the lieutenant governor slot.

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Colorado’s Tax Credit for Sierra Nevada Raises Questions

The governor’s office announced two weeks ago that Sierra Nevada plans to add 200 jobs in Colorado, noting that a new tax-incentive program played a central role in the expansion. What wasn’t noted was that the Nevada-based aerospace company laid off about a half-dozen employees in the Denver area this year, raising questions about whether the tax credit can appropriately be given to a company that recently cut jobs, The Denver Post reports.

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Despite Gap, Colorado GOP Upbeat About 2010 Elections

Bolstered by public frustrations with government, GOP leaders have set their sights on reclaiming the state House and Senate in an election year that will shape Colorado politics for the next decade. Analysts tell The Denver Post that a takeover of both chambers and the governorship in 2010 a long shot. State Bill Colorado weighed in recently with its own seat-by-seat analysis of the Colorado House.

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Colo. Bill to Grant In-State Tuition to Illegal Immigrants on Hold Until 2011

A bill to allow illegal immigrants to receive in-state tuition won’t go forward in the 2010 session, says the lawmaker who planned to sponsor the legislation. “I’m going to wait until 2011 to build a larger, broader, more bipartisan coalition of business, religious, legislative and civic leaders,” Rep. Joe Miklosi told The Denver Post.

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SBA Borrowers Surprised To Find Their Loans Backed By Stimulus

The Farmer’s Table restaurant in Fort Collins has one of nearly 80 loans made this year by the SBA in Larimer County under the auspices of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The husband of one of the co-owners said he was unaware the loan was coming from stimulus funds, and he’s a little un-comfortable with the idea, The Coloradoan newspaper reports.

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Colorado Governor’s Race Called Country’s 10th-Most Interesting

Colorado’s transition from a nine-point Bush state in 2000 to a nine-point Obama state in 2008 has been well-documented. But the honeymoon is over, and Gov. Bill Ritter’s (D) 57-40 triumph over Rep. Bob Beauprez (R-Colo.) in 2006 is now ancient history, Washington, D.C.’s The Hill newspaper reports.

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L.A. Times Weighs In On CSU Gun Ban Policy Change

After a gun-wielding student killed 32 at Virginia Tech, faculty at Colorado State University in Fort Collins found, to their alarm, that theirs was one of the few public schools in the country with no policy banning firearms. Anyone with a concealed weapons permit could legally carry on campus. Students, however, were alarmed when the faculty moved to change that, The Los Angeles Times reports.
The proposed policy is published below.

PDF of Weapons Policy

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GOP Lawmakers Protest DOT’s Plan To Leave Some Roads Unplowed

The state Department of Transportation plans to leave snow on nearly 2,800 miles of less-traveled rural highways during evening hours this winter, and lawmakers who represent those areas are fuming. Citing public safety concerns, a dozen legislators, mostly Republicans, have drafted a letter asking transportation officials and Gov. Bill Ritter to send out plows to the farther reaches of the state’s highway system, The Dener Post reports.

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