SCOTUS Needs to Clarify the Line Between Doctors and Drug Dealers
Patients suffer when physicians who prescribe opioids in good faith can face decades in prison.

Xiulu Ruan, a board-certified Alabama pain specialist, was sentenced to 21 years in federal prison for prescribing opioid analgesics "outside the usual course of professional medical practice." According to the appeals court that upheld his conviction, it did not matter whether he sincerely believed he was doing what a physician is supposed to do.
That ruling, which is the focus of a case the Supreme Court heard on Tuesday, conflates negligence with criminal liability, invites the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to usurp state medical regulators, and encourages prosecutions that have a chilling effect on pain treatment. If it is allowed to stand, doctors who already face intense pressure to curtail opioid prescriptions will be even more inclined to elevate drug control above pain control.
Ruan's trial featured the usual battle of experts. Defense witnesses portrayed him as a conscientious physician doing his best to serve patients in dire need, while prosecution witnesses portrayed him as careless and blind to "red flags" indicating abuse or diversion of the drugs he prescribed.
Some of this disagreement stemmed from dueling interpretations of Ruan's practices and lapses. Some of it stemmed from ongoing debates on issues such as the risks and benefits of long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain and, more generally, how to balance patients' needs against the government's demand that physicians prevent misuse of pain medication.
That demand puts doctors in a difficult position, since pain cannot be objectively verified. If they trust their patients, some people will take advantage of that trust; if they reflexively treat their patients with suspicion, some people will suffer needlessly from pain that could have been relieved safely and effectively.
The threat of regulatory sanctions and malpractice lawsuits already forces clinicians to weigh the risk to their licenses and livelihoods if they make questionable prescribing decisions. The threat of criminal prosecution ups the ante, because it means that doctors also can lose their liberty if they make decisions that the DEA, a law enforcement agency with no medical expertise, views as medically inappropriate.
Criminal penalties traditionally are reserved for people who knowingly break the law. But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit has held that a physician's "good faith belief that he dispensed a controlled substance in the usual course of his professional practice is irrelevant" to the question of whether he violated the Controlled Substances Act (CSA).
Based on that reading of the law, the 11th Circuit rejected Ruan's argument that he was entitled to a jury instruction precluding a guilty verdict if the evidence indicated that he honestly thought his prescriptions were "for a legitimate medical purpose" and that he was "acting in the usual course of his professional practice," as required by CSA regulations. As the appeals court saw it, Ruan could be sent to prison for decades even if he unintentionally fell short of those ambiguous standards.
Doctors defending themselves against CSA charges in other circuits face obstacles that are nearly as daunting. In a case that was consolidated with Ruan's, the trial court told the jury that good faith "connotes an attempt to act in accordance with what a reasonable physician should believe to be proper medical practice."
While that standard might make sense in a malpractice lawsuit, it falls short of the culpability that is usually required for a criminal conviction. Worse, when the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit considered the same case, it held that good faith, however defined, does not matter in deciding whether a prescription was written in "the usual course of professional practice," which must be determined "objectively."
As two health law professors note in a brief supporting Ruan's appeal, uncertainty about which practices may provoke federal prosecution hurts patients as well as physicians. It provides yet another reason to turn away or abandon patients who already are suffering from the indiscriminate crackdown on pain medication, sacrificing their welfare on the altar of the war on drugs.
© Copyright 2022 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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This is absurd. Scotus needs to do no such thing. The federal government needs to stop treating drug dealers like criminals.
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Actually, SCOTUS should affirm mens rea AND Congress of repeal the drug war. The two are not mutually exclusive.
Sullum is an idiot, full of shit and should have read the trial summaries. Xiulu Ruan had been receiving years of kickbacks from the distributors, guaranteeing him a minimum of $80K per month, plus owned the pharmacy that all the scripts for fentanyl were filled at costing up to $24K per month per patient. Then started donating his guarantee when the criminal complaint got filed.
The man and his partner are opioid dealers, in it for millions and swindled insurance companies and Medicaid/Medicare out of substantial money. I feel no pain for the man. There were lots of other charges as well, not the least of which was knowingly letting someone else forge the doctor's name over 25000 times for scripts going to the doctor-owned pharmacy.
There are problem cases, but this certainly wasn't one of them. Sullum, you get an F. You didn't think anyone would look, did you... Jacob?
And the government interfering in voluntary trades is OK with you?
Fuck off, slaver.
No, just saying Jacob was portraying the facts disingenuously by leaving out details that seem to say mens rea could've been established regardless.
No, you are taking the government's side and happy with them prosecuting a drug dealer. Fuck off, slaver.
Sure, just disregard the fraud there.
This point is irrelevant to the question the court will be answering. Unless otherwise explicitly said by the legislature, criminal laws require intent, "mens rea". This particular doctor may have indeed had criminal intent, but the lower court said that was irrelevant. The lower court making that determination may have deprived him of his constitutional right to due process. The supreme court will answer if "criminal intent" is relevant.
Criminal intent is key, but if a doctor can negate that my simply saying that as a doctor he thought this was fine means none will ever face limits or punishment. Many DUI drivers never meant to kill their crash victims, but when you violate known rules and people die you are criminally liable.
The appeals court said that the actual jury instruction given included:
If there's a distinction between that and what you're saying about a mens rea requirement, it's so subtle as to be insignificant to me.
I think we agree. Article and comments implied that the court disregarded the docs' intent. If the docs were outside of the instruction you quoted, they should not be allowed to argue they didn't know better and had no intent. They are crossing a line like the drunk getting behind the wheel. If they disagree with the "usual course of a professional practice" then they need to do something else for a living.
Reason doesn't do a great job with criminal case descriptions. I note that often the actual issue being considered is different than what Reason describes. SCOTUSBlog does a much better job. Their summary: The government argues the intent standard is an objective one — an “honest effort” to comply with professional norms. The doctors argue that the standard must be subjective — did the doctor subjectively believe she was not prescribing for a legitimate medical purpose — in order to differentiate a criminal offense from a mere regulatory violation.
Jfc you're a moron.
Just because some charges are legitimate doesn't mean it's acceptable for the government to also convict you of illegitimate charges. That's how precedents get set. Next time, there won't be the obvious criminal behavior. And SCOTUS isn't addressing settled matters of law, they're limiting the inquiry to the issues described in the article.
More to the point, the entire war on drugs is bullshit and medical practices shouldn't be targeted by drug control, period.
Yet another "libertarian" who can't get the government's boot far enough up their ass I guess.
fuck off slaver
I hung a jury in a federal narcotics case. Years later I was empaneled in another narcotics case, and although the perps were charged with illegal possession of narcotics, they way they got those narcotics was by burglarizing the pharmacy! So it was just more convenient to charge them for the narcotics than for the burglary. (They stole cash too.) Do you think I would've been against conviction had I gotten onto that jury?
Don't take the law too literally. You seriously think precedents mean shit? Even on such a fine distinction as at issue in this case?
SCOTUS needs to keep government from getting between doctor and patient.
between government and patient you mean
im 24musicplay As two health law professors note in a brief supporting Ruan's appeal as my own point here
I swear to god if someone doesn't go to fucking jail for this.
nothing will ever happen
Nope. That's not what SCOTUS needs to do.
Dr. Ruan may well have committed criminal acts. However, it would be great if Scotus uses this case to disentangle the legal/regulatory mess. I experienced the adverse side of this mess. The individual or small practice HCP's just flat stopped prescribing any opiates, not just fentanyl. When pain is so severe and persistent that you cannot walk, or breathe during a flare, it is hard to accept state legislature's interference in medical decisions. If anything, the CDC's original guidance was criminally inept.
The Harrison Act of 1914 answered Sullum's question. A doctor is anyone who swears that all Congressional prohibitionist superstition is True Christian Science and that stimulants and narcotics are the same addictive thing AND pays a dope tax, fills out forms and record books in exchange for a license. Everyone else that so much as passes someone a joint is ipso facto a malpracticing criminal dope dealer and Assassin Of Youth. Q.E.D.
The deterrent effect on doctors is real.
I see some of my anesthesiologist colleagues have stopped premedication with sedatives and give narcotic free anesthesia.
While this is technically possible, it is a huge disservice to patients.
Pre op sedation can make you forget the entire operating room experience.
And intraoperative narcotics lead to a pain free wake up.
Patients given this narcotic and sedative free anesthesia are being given sub optimal care.
All because of the hysteria against narcotics.
Which have an important medical use
And dont get me started on the state mandated inadequate post op pain pill prescription
I advise everyone to hoard any pain pills they have to use after future surgery
I've had the opposite issue: far too many pain pills prescribed than needed. After two surgeries (tendon repair & then a plate and screws to set a broken leg) after two days I didn't require any pain meds but both prescriptions were for 30 pills...
Or....the US could repeal its futile, destructive drug prohibition and stop turning otherwise civil people into criminals because they imbibe something others might find offensive...
Very informative article. Thanks well.
How many times do the powers that be have to be told that opioid doses vary from person to person. Some folks need high doses to control their pain and increase quality of life and some get by fine with low doses. These decisions need to be made between doctor and patient. Neither the CDC nor the DEA have a medical license; thus, sticking their noses into the relationship is tantamount to practicing medicine without a license. The torture of chronic pain patients has to stop.