VIVIAN L. MEDINILLA, Judge.
A final order of the Board of Medical Licensure and Discipline of the State of Delaware ("the Board") found that Appellant, physician William Bilski D.O., ("Dr. Bilski") acted unprofessionally and violated the Medical Practice Act, pursuant to 24 Del. C. § 1731(b)(11). This is Dr. Bilski's appeal pursuant to 24 Del. C. § 1736, 29 Del. C. § 10142, and Superior Court Civil Rule 72. This Court finds that the Board's order is supported by substantial evidence and free from legal error. Therefore, the Board's order is
On May 23, 2011, the Division of Professional Regulation ("Division") received a letter from a concerned parent regarding Dr. Bilski's controlled substance prescribing practices. The Division assigned an investigator, Ralph Kemmerlin ("Kemmerlin"), who subpoenaed records and interviewed Dr. Bilski. During the course of the investigation, Dr. Bilksi informed Kemmerlin of a second patient whom Dr. Bilksi suspected had stolen a prescription pad. This prompted Kemmerlin to open a second investigative complaint, wherein he subpoenaed additional records and re-interviewed Dr. Bilksi regarding the second patient.
Following the investigation, on February 4, 2013, the Delaware Department of Justice ("DOJ") filed a disciplinary complaint with the Board alleging that Dr. Bilski was guilty of unprofessional conduct. The DOJ specifically alleged that beginning in 2009, while prescribing controlled substances to his patients, Dr. Bilski failed to document the nature and intensity of his patient's pain, current and past pain treatments, underlying or coexisting diseases or conditions, the effects of his patient's pain on their physical and psychological functions, objectives to measure success of controlled substance use over time, and discussions with patients of the risks and benefits of using controlled substances.
The DOJ complaint asserted, in part, that Dr. Bilski's conduct violated the Federation of State Medical Boards' Model Policy for the Use of Controlled Substances ("Model Policy"), Board Regulation 31,
The Hearing Officer heard evidence of deficient medical record keeping practices related to two patients over the course of two years — collectively resulting in the sum of more than sixty (60) deficient documentation practices. Specifically, from 2009 to 2011, as to the first patient, Dr. Bilski issued monthly prescriptions including Oxycontin, Lortab, and Soma, for the treatment of pain.
The medical documentation of Dr. Bilski's second patient is plagued with similar deficiencies. Dr. Bilski prescribed Oxycodone and other controlled substances to manage his patient's pain from October 2009 to June 2011.
Dr. Bilski did not dispute the lack of documentation regarding his patients' treatment plans. However, he argued for dismissal of the charges based on the following: (1) Because Board Regulation 31 was not adopted until 2012, and after the relevant period of conduct, he was not in violation of said regulation, (2) the Model Policy could not legally set mandatory requirements, and (3) the complaint failed to give adequate notice of the charges.
Following approximately eleven hours of hearing, wherein Dr. Bilski was represented by counsel, the Hearing Officer found a set of facts and made recommendations to the Board. Specifically, the Hearing Officer issued a ninety page recommendation on July 10, 2013 in which he recommended the Board find Dr. Bilski's conduct rose to the level of misconduct and violated 24 Del. C. § 1731(b)(11):
The Hearing Officer recommended the Board discipline Dr. Bilski by placing his medical license on probation for one year and that he be permitted to petition to have his probationary period terminated after six months if he could demonstrate that he had followed Board rules regarding pain management practices for prescribing controlled substances, completed continuing education courses, and transferred care of his pain management patients to another physician during his probationary period.
Following the Hearing Officer's recommendation, the parties were provided with twenty days to submit to the Board for their consideration written argument, objections or exceptions to the Hearing Officer's findings of facts and recommended conclusions of law and discipline. Specifically, Dr. Bilski appeared through his counsel at a September 10, 2013 meeting to present oral arguments before the Board. The Board considered Dr. Bilski's oral and written arguments, and in its January 7, 2014 Public Order, the Board adopted the facts found by the Hearing Officer, but
The Board adopted the Hearing Officer's recommended penalty of the imposition of a one-year probationary period subject to a six month review, but modified the penalty from the original recommendation that Dr. Bilski transfer his pain management patients and instead ordered him to submit to a medical records audit and complete additional continuing education courses in record keeping.
Dr. Bilski filed a Notice of Appeal with this Court on October 7, 2013 and an Opening Brief on January 15, 2014. The Board filed an Answering Brief on February 5, 2014. Dr. Bilski filed a Reply on February 21, 2014.
On appeal, this Court determines whether the Board's decision is supported by substantial evidence and free from legal error.
Dr. Bilski puts forth five arguments in support of reversal: (I) the Board committed legal error by basing its determination upon its own expertise and not on evidence in the record, (II) the Board's decision was not supported by substantial evidence because no expert testimony was provided at the evidentiary hearing,
Dr. Bilski cites to the statutory authority in 18 Del. C. § 6853(e) which establishes that "[n]o liability shall be based upon asserted negligence unless expert medical testimony is presented." Specifically, he argues that the Board committed legal error by implicitly ruling that no expert testimony was necessary to establish standard of care for purposes of their review, and suggests that this is in violation of 18 Del. C. § 6853(e).
Dr. Bilski seeks to transpose the requirements of "medical negligence" to the Board's procedures in interpreting its own statute for disciplinary proceedings. 18 Del. C. § 6853(e) applies to medical negligence as defined in 18 Del. C. § 6801(7):
The Court has, in the past, made clear that the technical requirements of medical negligence claims are not identical to those of administrative board claims.
Rather, the Board considered claims filed by the DOJ against Dr. Bilski at an administrative level that are distinguishable from the legal processes of a typical medical negligence case. While the Board may rely on expert testimony for matters related to the various licensing issues it is asked to review, Dr. Bilski provides no authority for the proposition that all Board decisions require expert testimony in order to establish standard of care.
Similarly, Dr. Bilski claims that the Board impermissibly "use[d] its own institutional expertise to create evidence."
For the reasons above stated, the Court does not interchange or impose the statutory requirements of the medical negligence statute to reviews considered by the Board and rejects Dr. Bilski's argument that expert testimony at an administrative level is mandated pursuant to 18 Del. C. § 6853(e).
In reviewing the factual determinations of the Board, this Court's analysis is guided by 29 Del. C. § 10142(d):
Dr. Bilski renews his argument that there was insufficient evidence because there was no expert testimony in this case.
Dr. Bilski argues that the there was not substantial evidence to support the Board's finding that Dr. Bilski's conduct amounted to a "pattern of negligence in the practice of medicine" in violation of 24 Del. C. § 1731(11). In support, Dr. Bilski cites to the Supreme Court of Delaware's analysis of an alleged "pattern" of negligence in In re Reardon to suggest there was not enough in this record to find a "pattern" of negligence.
The In re Reardon Court explained:
Dr. Bilski argues that "[a]t best the evidence in the record is that [he] did not abide by the Model Policy with respect to two patients over a narrow period of time . . . [e]ven if failing the policy is wrong, it is a single wrong, not a pattern."
Dr. Bilski, a professional caregiver, was given licensing privileges in Delaware to medically care for patients in family medicine with a small percentage of his practice dedicated to patients with chronic pain issues. The Board considered facts which demonstrated a pattern of carelessness and disregard in Dr. Bilski's record-keeping. Dr. Bilski failed to document physical examinations or perform comprehensive pain assessments. He did not document his treatment plans or what, if anything, he communicated to his patients regarding the risks associated with long-term use of the pain management medications prescribed. Multiple entries in his records were unclear as to when prescriptions were issued or refills ordered and, sometimes failed to identify which medications were refilled. He failed to show comprehensive pain evaluations or alternative treatment options. Even where there was suspicion of wrongdoing (i.e., sale of drugs or forgery), Dr. Bilski's records do not document the suspicion or indicate an attempt to contact the system partners, such as the pharmacy, to prevent potential illegal activity.
While it is true that the misconduct may have only involved two patients, the carelessness and lack of attention to them spanned over the course of two years and included more than sixty (60) plus specifically identified instances of inadequate documentation practices. This was more than a single wrong.
For the reasons above, this Court finds that there is substantial evidence to support the Board's decision that Dr. Bilski's conduct amounted to a pattern of negligence.
A professional license is a protected property interest, and to comport with due process the licensee has a right to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.
Dr. Bilski argues that he did not receive proper notice and compares the notice provided in this case to the insufficient notice in Cain v. Delaware Bd. Of Accountancy.
In Cain, a licensed accountant received a copy of a complaint filed by a former client, along with notification from the Board of Accountancy that a hearing would be held.
The complaint here satisfies the standard of notice under Cain. Dr. Bilski was provided with a DOJ complaint that identifies his failure to properly document medical charts while prescribing substances. The complaint further states that this conduct "violated the following provisions of . . . [24 Del. C. §] 1731(b)(11) in that he engaged in misconduct and . . . a pattern of negligence in the practice of medicine."
In his final claim, Dr. Bilski argues that the Hearing Officer erred as a matter of law by concluding that the Model Policy created mandatory requirements. This Court is not persuaded by this argument. Under appellate review is the Board's decision, not the Hearing Officer's recommendation. While it is true that the Board is, in general, bound by the findings of fact made by the Hearing Officer,
In light of the forgoing, this Court concludes that there was substantial evidence to support the decision of the Board and that it was free from any errors of law. Accordingly, it is hereby