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BOARD OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE vs ARTHUR LODATO, 93-005403 (1993)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Fort Lauderdale, Florida Sep. 17, 1993 Number: 93-005403 Latest Update: Jan. 17, 1997

Findings Of Fact Findings based on stipulation Petitioner is the state agency charged with regulating the practice of osteopathic medicine pursuant to Section 20.30, Florida Statutes, Chapter 455, Florida Statutes, and Chapter 459, Florida Statutes. Respondent is, and has been at all times material hereto, licensed to practice osteopathic medicine in the State of Florida, having been issued license number OS 0001228. Respondent's last known address is 577 N.E. 107th Street, Miami, Florida 33161. Findings based on evidence at hearing On November 5, 1990, patient N. S. initially presented to the Respondent's office for a physical examination for the purpose of obtaining health insurance with Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Florida. During the course of the initial visit, when the Respondent became aware of where N. S. and her mother lived, it was obvious to him that N. S. lived in an expensive residential area and was probably a person of substantial financial means. Patient N. S. subsequently presented to the Respondent and received treatment from him for a variety of complaints on the following dates: November 14 and 27, 1990; December 10 and 20, 1990, January 7, 23, and 28, 1991, March 5, 1991, and April 15, 1991. Patient N. S. paid for all of the treatments and laboratory tests on the dates the treatments and tests took place. At the request of the Respondent, the checks written by patient N. S. to pay for services provided by the Respondent were made out to "cash." One day in early January of 1991, the Respondent contacted the patient N. S. by telephone at her home and asked her to loan him $8,000.00 or $8,500.00. The Respondent told the patient N. S. he needed the money because he was three months behind in making payments on the mortgage on his office-house, and because the mortgage was going to be foreclosed if he failed to pay the past due amounts in the next couple of days. In the course of this conversation the Respondent also remarked to N. S. that he would not be able to help her get well if the mortgage were to be foreclosed and he were to lose his office. Patient N. S. initially refused to loan any money to the Respondent. During the course of the next two days, the Respondent made numerous repeated pleas to N. S. for a loan. Ultimately, N. S. agreed to loan the Respondent a total of $1,000.00. The loan was to be repaid within sixty days and was without interest. On January 11, 1991, patient N. S. wrote a personal check to the Respondent in the amount of $1,000.00. Thereafter, the Respondent cashed the check. The patient N. S. made the $1,000.00 loan to the Respondent because she wanted the Respondent to be able to continue to treat her and not have his office repossessed. The Respondent did not timely repay the $1,000.00 loan. Shortly after the due date, the patient N. S. asked the Respondent on several occasions to repay the loan. On April 15, 1991, the patient N. S. sent a certified letter to the Respondent requesting repayment of the loan. On July 2, 1991, the patient N. S. sent the Respondent another certified letter requesting repayment of the loan and advising the Respondent that if the loan was not repaid by July 12, 1991, she intended to send complaints to the Department of Professional Regulation and to the Internal Revenue Service. During March and April of 1991, the Respondent was ill. Towards the end of April the Respondent was hospitalized and underwent surgery. The surgery was followed by several weeks of recuperation. During this period the Respondent had very little income and it was not possible for him to repay the loan to the patient N. S. On July 24, 1991, the patient N. S. sent yet another certified letter to the Respondent. In the letter of July 24, 1991, the patient N. S. requested that the Respondent provide her with various specified documents related to his treatment of her, including "my complete medical records." The patient N. S. sent a copy of the July 24, 1991, letter to the Department of Professional Regulation. On that same day, the patient N. S. signed and mailed to the Department of Professional Regulation a Uniform Complaint Form complaining about the Respondent. On August 29, 1991, the Sunshine Messenger Service delivered to the patient N. S. a letter from the Respondent dated August 28, 1991, which read as follows: Enclosed is the sum of $1000 in return for the check you loaned to me. I'm sorry that it took as long as this date to return same. Your request for your records, etc. are being copied and will be mailed very soon. Sorry for the delay. Hope you are in good health. The letter was accompanied by two postal money orders payable to the patient N. S., each in the amount of $500.00. On September 16, 1991, Petitioner's investigator Schaublin spoke by telephone with the Respondent and at that time advised him of the Complaint that had been filed against him by his patient N. S. Investigator Schaublin advised the Respondent that two principal issues were being investigated: (1) his request and receipt of a loan that was not timely repaid, and (2) his failure to provide medical records requested by the patient. During the telephone conversation of September 16, 1991, the Respondent agreed to meet with the investigator at the investigator's office on September 25, 1991, and to bring with him at that time the medical records of the patient N. S. On September 25, 1991, the Respondent went to the investigator's office and delivered to the investigator a set of medical records for the patient N. S. The records appeared to be facially complete. The investigator handed the Respondent a subpoena for the records at the time the records were delivered to the investigator. At some time between the Respondent's receipt of the July 24, 1991, request for records and his delivery of records to the investigator on September 25, 1991, the Respondent discovered that two pages were missing from the records of the patient N. S. The missing pages consisted of the Respondent's progress notes regarding the treatment of the patient N. S. The Respondent conducted an extensive, but unsuccessful, search for the two missing pages. Upon concluding that he was unlikely to find the missing pages, the Respondent contacted an attorney and requested advice as to what he should do under the circumstances. The attorney advised the Respondent that he should do the best he could to reconstruct the missing records from his memory and from whatever other information was still available. The Respondent did his best to follow the advice he had received from the attorney. In an effort to verify dates, the Respondent called the pharmacy to which he had called in prescriptions for the patient N. S. With the information he had at hand, and based on his memory of his treatment of the patient N. S., the Respondent reconstructed the two missing pages of progress notes. In the process of reconstructing the progress notes, the Respondent made some inadvertent mistakes regarding the dates on which certain office visits took place. Other than the mistakes as to some of the dates, the reconstructed records accurately and sufficiently describe the Respondent's treatment of the patient N. S. The Respondent's records of his treatment of the patient N. S. do not contain a notation that the progress notes are reconstructed notes. When the Respondent delivered medical records to the Petitioner's investigator on September 25, 1991, he did not tell the investigator that two pages of the records had been reconstructed. Upon review of the medical records delivered by the Respondent, the investigator noted that some of the dates in the progress notes did not match dates with other documents in the investigator's possession and also noted that the progress notes looked like they had all been written at the same time. On September 27, 1991, the investigator contacted the Respondent by telephone and brought these apparent irregularities to the Respondent's attention. During the telephone conversation of September 27, 1991, the Respondent told the investigator that he had reconstructed the progress notes after being unable to find the missing notes. This was the first time the Respondent had mentioned to the Petitioner that the subject medical records contained two reconstructed pages. On October 4, 1995, the Respondent sent copies of his records to the patient N. S., along with a letter addressed to the patient N. S. The letter read as follows: Sorry for the delay in mailing your records. I have diligently looked thru your file and in the office and at home for the medical records missing that are the two written pages that I have reconstructed to the best of my ability as to dates. The billing ledger was also in the chart and has not been found. In order to recreate the bills for tax purposes, I could help you if I had the dates and amounts from photocopies of the cancelled checks. The Respondent did not destroy any medical records regarding the patient N. S. The Respondent did not falsify or attempt to falsify any medical records of the patient N. S. The documents of which official recognition has been taken reveal that the Respondent has been the subject of prior disciplinary action by the Petitioner. The most significant instances of prior disciplinary action were DPR Case No. 0052390, in which the Respondent stipulated to the imposition of disciplinary action on the basis of violations related to the improper prescription of controlled substances, and DPR Case No. 89-008659, in which the Respondent stipulated to the imposition of disciplinary action on the basis of a violation related to exploitation of a patient for financial gain by borrowing money from a patient. At the time of the Respondent's treatment of the patient N. S., the Respondent was still serving the term of probation imposed in DPR Case No. 0052390.

Recommendation On the basis of all of the foregoing, it is RECOMMENDED that a Final Order be issued in this case to the following effect: Dismissing Counts Two, Three, Four, Five, and Six of the Administrative Complaint; Finding the Respondent guilty of the violation charged in Count One of the Administrative Complaint; and Imposing a penalty consisting of all of the following: (a) an administrative fine in the amount of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), (b) suspension of the Respondent's license for a period of ninety (90) days, (c) placing the Respondent on probation for a period of one (1) year following the suspension, and (d) restricting the Respondent's practice by prohibiting him from entering into any financial arrangements with patients other than those arrangements reasonably necessary to assure payment for osteopathic medical services provided by the Respondent. DONE AND ENTERED this 6th day of March 1996 at Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. MICHAEL M. PARRISH, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 SC 278-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 6th day of March 1996. APPENDIX The following are my specific rulings on all proposed findings of fact submitted by all parties. Findings submitted by Petitioner: Paragraphs 1 through 10: Accepted in substance, but with a few unnecessary details omitted and with a few details modified in the interest of clarity. Paragraph 11: Rejected as subordinate and unnecessary details. Paragraph 12: Accepted in substance. Paragraph 13: Rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 14: Accepted in substance. Paragraph 15: Rejected as irrelevant. Paragraphs 16 through 20: Accepted in substance, but with a few unnecessary details omitted and with a few details modified in the interest of clarity. Paragraph 21: First sentence accepted in substance. Second sentence rejected as subordinate and unnecessary details. Paragraph 22: Rejected as irrelevant. Findings submitted by Respondent: Paragraphs 1 and 2: Accepted. Paragraph 3: Accepted in part and rejected in part. Accepted that the Respondent and N. S. had a physician-patient relationship during the relevant time period. The notion that the Respondent and N. S. also had a business venture relationship is rejected as contrary to the greater weight of the evidence. N. S. made suggestions to the Respondent as to how he could improve his practice, but there was no joint business venture relationship. Paragraph 4: First sentence accepted in substance. The second sentence is rejected as contrary to the greater weight of the evidence; there was no business relationship. Paragraph 5: Accepted in substance. Paragraphs 6 and 7: Rejected as subordinate and unnecessary details. Paragraphs 8 through 12: Accepted in substance. Paragraph 13: Accepted in substance, with the exception of the second sentence and the last sentence. The second sentence is rejected as not supported by persuasive competent substantial evidence. The last sentence is rejected as subordinate and unnecessary details. Paragraph 14: Accepted in substance. COPIES FURNISHED: Kenneth J. Metzger, Esquire Agency For Health Care Administration 1940 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0792 Michael J. Doddo, Esquire 100 Southeast 12th Street Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33316 William H. Buckhalt, Executive Director Board of Osteopathic Medicine 1940 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0792 Douglas M. Cook, Director Agency For Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Jerome W. Hoffman, General Counsel Agency For Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308

Florida Laws (3) 120.57459.013459.015
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, BOARD OF MEDICINE vs ERIC N. GROSCH, M.D., 13-001688PL (2013)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Gainesville, Florida May 10, 2013 Number: 13-001688PL Latest Update: Dec. 26, 2024
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, BOARD OF NURSING vs TONI MARIE STARLING, 00-003062PL (2000)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Miami, Florida Jul. 26, 2000 Number: 00-003062PL Latest Update: Dec. 26, 2024
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BOARD OF MEDICINE vs PETRU ORASAN, 94-001471 (1994)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Hollywood, Florida Mar. 17, 1994 Number: 94-001471 Latest Update: Feb. 29, 1996

The Issue This is a license discipline case in which the Petitioner seeks to take disciplinary action against the Petitioner on the basis of alleged violations of the Medical Practice Act, Chapter 458, Florida Statutes. In an eight-count Amended Administrative Complaint, the Respondent has been charged with four violations of Section 458.331(l)(m), Florida Statutes, and four violations of Section 458.331(l)(t), Florida Statutes.

Findings Of Fact The Respondent is, and has been at all times material to this proceeding, a licensed physician in the State of Florida. His license number is ME0022079. Facts regarding Patient #1 The Respondent provided medical treatment to Patient #1 from April 20, 1987, through April 12, 1988. During the period of that treatment Patient #1 was approximately 92 years old and was diagnosed as having organic brain syndrome. Respondent obtained a brief past medical history of the patient and failed to document the patient's current complaints or review any prior medical records of the patient. On May 26, 1987, Respondent diagnosed the patient with pedal edema and ordered Hygroton 25 mg., but failed to document in the medical records the number of times per day the patient was to take the medication or the dosage for the medication. On June 6, 1987, the patient presented with shortness of breath and a blood pressure of 110/80. Respondent did not perform any tests or examinations to determine the cause of the symptoms. On July 14, 1987, and September 22, 1987, the patient again presented with shortness of breath and pedal edema and Respondent only recorded the lungs as clear and took her blood pressure. Respondent did not perform any other tests or examinations to determine the cause of the symptoms. On October 26, 1987, when the patient presented with shortness of breath, Respondent noted an arrhythmia and blood pressure of 136/82. However, Respondent did not perform any tests or examinations to determine the course of the symptoms. When the patient presented with arrhythmia, the applicable standard of care 5/ required Respondent to perform an EKG, to check her digoxin levels, and monitor her electrolytes and renal functions. Respondent's medical records for the patient did not meet the applicable record-keeping standards 6/ because the records were incomplete, inadequate, and illegible. Specifically, the records did not have diagnoses, did not have a plan of treatment, and did not include thorough examinations or histories, making it impossible to determine the appropriate treatment for the patient. Facts regarding Patient #2 Respondent provided treatment to Patient #2 from July 11, 1978, until September 13, 1988. Patient #2, a male, was seventy-one years old when such treatment began. The patient had a history of gastric ulcers. Nevertheless, Respondent prescribed nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications which exacerbate or increase difficulties with gastric ulcers and bleeding without obtaining a complete history or conducting a full examination. Respondent's medical records did not document whether Respondent assessed the risk to the patient, discussed the risk with the patient, or made any determinations that the risks outweighed the benefits for the patient. In 1978, the patient presented with a chronic cough and chronic bronchitis. However, Respondent did not perform any chest x-rays to determine the origin of the cough or to rule out lung carcinoma. Over the years, the cough persisted and in 1982-1983, the patient experienced shortness of breath and increased ankle edema. Respondent prescribed diuretics without determining the etiology of the edema and without conducting renal status or electrolyte monitoring. In 1985, the patient was hospitalized with severe ankle swelling. Respondent did not aggressively treat the possibility of deep vein thrombosis or cellulitis, nor did he treat the patient with anticoagulants to lessen the risk of a blood clot going to the lung. The applicable standard of care required anticoagulant treatment under these circumstances. In 1987, the patient suffered a severe weight loss with the chronic cough. The Respondent's records do not reveal any attempt to make a diagnosis. On December 15, 1987, the patient complained of abdominal problems, which could have related to the steroidal anti-inflammatory medications prescribed. The Respondent's records fail to document any laboratory tests or examinations by Respondent to determine the cause of the complaints. Respondent breached the applicable standard of care by failing to perform an EKG on the patient when he presented with dizziness, light-headedness or syncopal episodes from September 1987, until July 12, 1988. When the patient presented on August 30, 1988, and September 13, 1988, with very serious complaints of precordial chest pain, shortness of breath, and palpitations, a reasonably prudent physician would have suspected that the patient was having a heart attack. Despite the symptoms, Respondent made a psychiatric diagnosis, rather than fully evaluating the heart and cardiac status. Respondent's medical records for the patient did not comply with the applicable record-keeping standards in that they did not contain thorough examinations or histories, and did not have diagnoses or plans of treatment for the patient. Facts regarding Patient #3 Respondent provided care to Patient #3 from November 17, 1987, until May 16, 1989. Patient #3, a female, was eighty-five years old when such treatment began. Respondent should have been aware from the patient's initial presentation, that the patient did not qualify to reside in an adult congregate living facility and should have taken steps to have her admitted to a skilled nursing facility. Respondent's failure to do so is a breach of the applicable standard of care. Respondent's initial examination of the patient was limited and Respondent failed to conduct an EKG to reveal the origin of the patient's pedal edema or irregular heartbeat. Respondent also failed to diagnose, treat, or refer the patient for a consult to evaluate her vision and hearing loss. Even though the diagnosis was not made in the Respondent's records, it is apparent from the medications prescribed by Respondent that the patient was being treated for congestive heart failure. She also had pedal edema, shortness of breath, and cardiac arrhythmia. Respondent failed to perform or conduct the appropriate tests and examinations to make a diagnosis of the patient's condition or to provide effective treatment. The patient had frequent episodes of high blood pressure for which Respondent prescribed diuretics. Respondent's prescribing of Tenormin violated the applicable standard of care and subjected the patient to serious cardiac risks. Respondent's medical records for the patient were illegible for the most part and in many instances omitted information about the diagnosis and course of treatment. For these reasons the records failed to comply with applicable record-keeping standards. Facts regarding Patient #4 Respondent provided treatment to Patient #4 from April 1985 until January 5, 1988. Patient #4, a male, was seventy-four years old when such treatment began. When the patient originally presented to Respondent, he was on cardiac medications, had complaints of possible arrhythmias, and had a history of organic brain syndrome and tardive dyskinesia. Respondent was required by the applicable standard of care to evaluate the patient's cardiac condition, renal status, and potassium level. Respondent breached the standard of care by failing to conduct these evaluations and examinations. On October 1, 1985, the patient presented with back pain. Rather than conducting a physical exam to determine the source of the pain, Respondent violated the standard of care and treated the pain symptomatically. The patient was prescribed an anti-psychotic drug, Mellaril, and throughout Respondent's care exhibited side effects, including falls with resulting abrasions. Respondent failed to discontinue the drug or take appropriate measures to determine the extent of the patient's condition and implement a course of treatment. On July 23, 1987, Respondent prescribed an amount of Dalmane considered excessive for geriatric patients. These inappropriate prescriptions constitute a departure from the applicable standard of care. Respondent's medical records for the patient were replete with omissions of physical exams, diagnoses, and plans of care, and were inadequate as to patient history and justification for course of treatment. For these reasons the records failed to comply with applicable record-keeping standards. Facts regarding prior discipline Respondent has been the subject of prior disciplinary action by the Board of Medicine. The prior disciplinary action was based on deficiencies in Respondent's record-keeping. The prior disciplinary action does not appear to have improved Respondent's record-keeping in any significant way.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Board of Medicine issue a final order in this case to the following effect: Concluding that the Respondent is guilty of four counts of violations of Section 458.331(l)(m), Florida Statutes, and four counts of violations of Section 458.331(l)(t), Florida Statutes, as charged in the Amended Administrative Complaint; and Imposing administrative penalties consisting of all of the following: (a) an administrative fine in the total amount of $4,000.00 (representing a $500.00 fine for each of the eight counts); (b) a one-year period of suspension of the Respondent's license; and (c) a one-year period of probation following the suspension, during which probation period the Respondent shall be required to have his records reviewed by a supervising physician approved by the Board, such supervising physician to provide quarterly reports to the Board regarding the sufficiency of the Respondent's record-keeping. DONE AND ENTERED this 2nd day of February 1995 in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. MICHAEL M. PARRISH Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 2nd day of February 1995.

Florida Laws (4) 120.57120.68458.33190.706
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, BOARD OF NURSING vs PATRICK MALTAIS, 00-001960 (2000)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tampa, Florida May 10, 2000 Number: 00-001960 Latest Update: Dec. 26, 2024
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BOARD OF MEDICINE vs. WILLIAM T. BREESMAN, 88-005117 (1988)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 88-005117 Latest Update: May 15, 1989

Findings Of Fact Petitioner is the state agency charged with regulating the practice of medicine pursuant to Section 20.30, Florida Statutes, and Chapter 458, Florida Statutes. Respondent is and has been at all times material hereto a licensed physician in the State of, Florida having been issued license No. 0033496. Respondent's address is 133 Darnell Avenue, Spring Hill, Florida 33626. Respondent rendered medical care and treatment to patient B.R. during the period July 11, 1985 to July 15, 1985 while she was a patient at the Oak Hill Community Hospital, Spring Hill, Florida for, among other things, acute transmural myocardial infarction. On or about July 15, 1985, patient B.R. died from acute myocardial infarction after resuscitative procedures were unsuccessful. Patient B.R. was brought to the emergency room at Oak Hill Community Hospital on July 11, 1985 by her husband after complaining of chest pains. Shortly after arrival she suffered a myocardial infarction and "coded." She was resuscitated and placed in the intensive care unit. As the medical services physician on call, Respondent was contacted and assumed the care of patient B.R., a 65 year old female. Respondent is Board-certified in internal medicine and is Board eligible in cardiology having completed a fellowship in cardiology at George Washington University in 1968. B.R. had formerly worked as a licensed practical nurse who suffered a back injury some years ago which resulted in back surgery three times. In 1978, some 10 years before her demise, B.R. suffered a heart attack. She also had a history of diabetes and recently had undergone a thyroidectomy. With this medical history she presented a complex case for care and treatment. With patient presenting the history and symptoms of B.R., a reasonably prudent physician would have ordered daily chest X-rays, had an echocardiagram taken, inserted a Swan-Ganz catheter and consulted with a cardiologist on the treatment of this patient. None of these were done by Respondent. While acknowledging those procedures above listed were clearly indicated, Respondent testified he suggested those procedures to B.R. but, while she was fully competent to understand his recommendation, B.R. refused to be further X-rayed, refused the echocardiagram because she thought it produced some type of nuclear radiation, and also specifically refused to have any tubes inserted in her veins which would result if the Swan-Ganz catheter was inserted. None of the patient's refusals to accept recommended procedures was charted in B.R.'s hospital records. Respondent testified that B.R. specifically directed him to not chart on her hospital record her refusal to undergo the test and procedures recommended by Respondent. Respondent further testified that following her refusal to undergo the test and procedures and under directions to him not to chart those refusals on the hospital chart, he put this history in his office notes. To corroborate thin testimony Respondent presented Exhibit 5, a copy of those office notes containing entries dated July 12, 13, 14, 15, and 23, August 13, September 26, December 13, 1985 and January 29, 1986, comprising 4 typewritten pages. While a patient has a absolute right to refuse treatment or procedures recommended by his/her physician, the patient does not have the right to direct the physician to prepare an incomplete record of his treatment and progress. The principal purpose of the chart is to record medical evidence of the patient's condition, treatment rendered and results obtained to provide a history from which another physician can, if necessary, adequately take over the care of the patient. The record also provides a history of the patient's response to treatment. Respondent's explanation that if he had expected to be away and another physician had to take over the care and treatment of B.R. he would have made the other physician aware of B.R.'s refusal to undergo the recommended procedures totally failed to satisfy the need for a complete record of the patient in one place. To prove the validity of the office notes as a "business record," Respondent testified that for the past 30 years he has maintained office notes in which he has placed information the patient didn't want in the hospital record. An expert witness in the field of questioned documents testified that each dated entry on Exhibit 5 was typed following a new insertion of the paper in the typewriter rather than all entries being typed at the same time or with the same insertion of the paper in the typewriter and this was consistent with what would be expected in normal office procedures. Respondent's office manager and secretary during the times reported on Exhibit 5 testified she was the one who normally transcribed Respondent's dictated notes, that Exhibit 5 was consistent with the normal office practice which would be to date the entries when they were typed, and, although she does not specifically recall typing each entry on Exhibit 5, they were probably all typed by her. Evidence questioning the validity of Respondent's testimony that the office notes were dictated contemporaneously with his treatment of B.R. and typed on the dates indicated included the testimony of the husband of B.R. that B.R. had a zest for life and it would be contrary to her nature to refuse certain procedures or consultations; the fact that on July 14, 1985 B.R. was intubated with the Respondent present; that there was no financial consideration involved as B.R. was adequately insured; the office manager and secretary of Respondent during the period the office notes are alleged to have been prepared is the daughter of Respondent; and the fact that at the peer review committee inquiry into the facts surrounding the death of B.R., Respondent never mentioned the existence of office notes although he was extensively questioned regarding his failure to maintain a more complete medical record in this case. From the foregoing it is found that B.R.'s refusal to submit to the procedures allegedly recommended by Respondent were not contemporaneously recorded in Respondent's office notes and Exhibit 5 was prepared after Respondent appeared before the hospital peer review committee if not also after the administrative complaint was filed in this case.

Florida Laws (3) 120.57120.68458.331
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BOARD OF MEDICINE vs LAZARO GUERRA, 98-004993 (1998)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Miami, Florida Nov. 09, 1998 Number: 98-004993 Latest Update: Jan. 06, 2000

The Issue At issue in this proceeding is whether Respondent committed the offenses set forth in the Administrative Complaint and, if so, what penalty should be imposed.

Findings Of Fact The Department of Health, Division of Medical Quality Assurance, Board of Medicine (Department), is a state agency charged with the duty and responsibility for regulating the practice of medicine pursuant to Section 20.43 and Chapters 455 and 458, Florida Statutes. Respondent, Lazaro Guerra, is, and was at all times material hereto, a licensed physician in the State of Florida, having been issued license number ME 0029249. Respondent is board-certified in orthopedic medicine. From on or about November 22, 1993 through at least October, 1994, Respondent was the supervising physician for Mariano Martinez, a certified physician's assistant, who was accorded clinical privileges at Coral Gables Hospital, a health care facility located at 3100 Douglas Road, Coral Gables, Florida. On one occasion in or about August 1994, while making a routine floor inspection at the hospital, Jan Bennett, Director of Risk Management at Coral Gables Hospital, observed Mr. Martinez wearing a laboratory coat embroidered "Dr. Mariano Martinez, Orthopedic Surgery." Ms. Bennett also overheard a member of the staff address Mr. Martinez as "doctor," without Mr. Martinez's correcting the staff member. Apart from this isolated occurrence, Mr. Martinez was not otherwise observed to have worn such a coat, or to have been addressed as doctor, and there is no proof that Respondent knew, observed, fostered, or condoned Mr. Martinez's behavior. Following the incident in question, Ms. Bennett looked at medical records on the floor, as well as records for patients that had been discharged, to see if Mr. Martinez's written orders had been countersigned by Respondent (evidencing his review) within seven days. According to Ms. Bennett, she did find medical records that had not been countersigned by Respondent within seven days; however, she did not address the number of occasions she found that Respondent had failed to countersign Mr. Martinez's written orders, and she did not produce or identify any such records at hearing. Indeed, the only proof presumatively offered to address such particulars were Physician's Orders for two patients (identified as Patient 1 and Patient 2), received into evidence (without objection) as Petitioner's Exhibit 4, pages 8-10; however, these records were not further discussed or identified at hearing, and the records for Patient 2 relate to an admission in August 1993, a time Respondent was not shown to have been a supervising physician for Mr. Martinez. Under the circumstances, the proof, at best, supports the conclusion that Respondent failed to countersign Mr. Martinez's written orders regarding one patient (Patient 1), within seven days. With regard to such failure, Respondent observed that he certainly never "knowingly fail[ed] to sign or countersign any written patient medical records that were prepared by Mr. Martinez." Rather, Respondent averred that he had an established procedure whereby he would countersign Mr. Martinez's written orders as they made rounds together, or, if Mr. Martinez made rounds on his own, Respondent would make rounds the next day and countersign Mr. Martinez's orders. If the patient had been discharged in the interim, the patient's records were transferred to the Medical Records Section (from the floor) for storage, and the Medical Records Section had an established protocol whereby the staff would flag (mark) the records that required Respondent's countersignature. With regard to Respondent's failure to countersign Mr. Martinez's orders for Patient 1, there is no (known) explanation; however, as likely an explanation as any other is that the Medical Records Section failed to mark the orders and Respondent, therefore (inadvertently) failed to countersign them.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that a final order be rendered which finds Respondent guilty of violating Subsection 458.331(1)(x), Florida Statutes, as alleged in Count One of the Administrative Complaint, but which withholds the imposition of any penalty for such violation. It is further RECOMMENDED that the final order find Respondent not guilty of the violation alleged in Count Two of the Administrative Complaint. DONE AND ENTERED this 24th day of September, 1999, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. WILLIAM J. KENDRICK Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 24th day of September, 1999.

Florida Laws (5) 120.569120.57120.6020.43458.331 Florida Administrative Code (2) 64B8-30.01264B8-8.001
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, BOARD OF MEDICINE vs DONALD A. TOBKIN, M.D., 05-002590PL (2005)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Lauderdale Lakes, Florida Jul. 19, 2005 Number: 05-002590PL Latest Update: Jun. 08, 2007

The Issue This is a license discipline case in which the Petitioner seeks to take disciplinary action against the Respondent on the basis of charges set forth in a three-count Administrative Complaint. The Administrative Complaint charges the Respondent with violations of paragraphs (m), (q), and (t) of Section 458.331(1) Florida Statutes.1

Findings Of Fact At all times material to this case, the Respondent, Donald A. Tobkin, M.D., has been licensed, and continues to be licensed, to practice medicine in the State of Florida. His license number is 30942.5 Sometime during the month of December 2004, the Police Department of Hollywood, Florida, (HPD) received information from a confidential informant that the Respondent was soliciting drug-prescribing business and was writing inappropriate and excessive prescriptions for controlled substances. On the basis of that information, the HPD initiated an undercover operation to investigate the information received from the confidential informant. As part of the undercover investigation, on the evening of January 20, 2005, at approximately 9:56pm, an HPD female detective named Nicole Coffin made a telephone call to the Respondent's telephone. The Respondent answered the telephone and identified himself by name. Detective Coffin pretended to be a person named Melissa Beech. She pretended to be a person who was seeking to obtain OxyContin, which is a Schedule II controlled substance. During the entire undercover investigation, Detective Coffin pretended to be a drug-seeker while interacting with the Respondent. On the telephone she told the Respondent that she wanted a prescription for OxyContin and also told the Respondent that a girl somewhere on Federal Highway had given her the Respondent's card and had told her she could call the Respondent if she needed a prescription. Detective Coffin, in her role as Melissa Beech, did not initially describe any medical complaint to the Respondent; she just said she wanted a prescription for OxyContin. In response to the request for a prescription for OxyContin, the Respondent told the make-believe drug-seeker that he could provide the requested prescription, but that they would have to have a "medical reason" for such a prescription. The Respondent then asked the make-believe drug-seeker if she had ever been in an automobile accident. The make-believe drug-seeker answered "yes," because that is the answer she thought would provide a basis for a "medical reason." The Respondent then proceeded to ask the make-believe drug-seeker a long series of leading questions which, if answered "yes," could provide the appearance of a "medical reason" for the requested prescription for OxyContin. This series of questions was for the purpose of establishing a contrived "medical reason" for the prescription sought by the make-believe drug-seeker. There never was, and there never appeared to be, any real "medical reason" for the prescription sought by the make-believe drug-seeker. The sole purpose for the many questions asked by the Respondent, and for the Respondent's written notations related to those questions, was to create the illusion, or the false impression, that there was a "medical reason' for the prescription when, in fact, there was no such reason. The detective who was pretending to be a drug-seeker answered "yes" to all of the leading questions asked by the Respondent. She answered "yes," even when that was not a truthful answer, because she was trying to give the answers she thought the Respondent wanted to hear.6 The Respondent's leading questions included questions asking about such things as whether the make-believe drug-seeker had ever had an automobile accident, whether she had suffered a herniated disk as a result of that accident, whether she had had an MRI, whether she had had any subsequent accidents, whether she had tried any other drugs to relieve pain, whether she had used Oxycontin in the past, and whether in the past the Oxycontin had relieved her pain. During the course of the first telephone conversation between Detective Coffin and the Respondent a number of significant matters were not discussed. The Respondent did not discuss the possibility of surgical treatments to treat the back pain described in response to the Respondent's questions. The Respondent did not discuss the necessity of reviewing the MRI or X-rays that supposedly would confirm the "herniated disc" he had inquired about. The Respondent did not discuss the necessity of obtaining future MRIs, X-rays, or other diagnostic tests to evaluate the "severe back pain" supposedly described by Detective Coffin in her role as Melissa Beech. The Respondent did not mention that she would need to have any follow-up visits with the Respondent. During the course of the first conversation between Detective Coffin and the Respondent, she told the Respondent that she had previously been obtaining Oxycontin "off the street" and that she was seeking a prescription from the Respondent because her street source had "dried up." She also told him that she had previously taken Valium and Percocet. During the course of the first telephone conversation Detective Coffin, pretending to be a drug-seeker, told the Respondent that she suffered from back pain as a result of the make-believe automobile accidents. She did not say that she was currently experiencing pain at the time of that telephone conversation. During the first telephone conversation the Respondent did not ask the make-believe drug-seeker any questions about her menstrual cycle, about whether she was pregnant, or about whether she had had any prior pregnancies or had ever had any children. However, in his written notes the Respondent included notations that purport to be answers to those unasked questions. Similarly, the Respondent did not ask the make-believe drug-seeker any questions about her consumption of alcohol, but included in his notes notations that purport to memorialize the answer to that unasked question. The Respondent's "history" notes also report that he warned the make-believe drug-seeker that OxyContin tablets should not be crushed or broken, even though he did not include any such warning in his telephone conversation with the make-believe drug-seeker. During the first telephone conversation, Detective Coffin was never asked about, and never provided any information about, whether other physicians had either prescribed OxyContin for her or had refused to prescribe OxyContin for her. The only prior sources of OxyContin she mentioned to the Respondent were non-prescription illegal sources on the street. The Respondent never discussed with Detective Coffin the possibility or necessity of a more structured medical treatment plan for addiction. The Respondent never discussed with Detective Coffin the possibility or necessity of a more structured medical treatment plan to treat a complaint of "severe pain." During the course of the first telephone conversation, the Respondent agreed to provide a prescription to the make- believe drug-seeker for a total of sixty-two 80-milligram OxyContin tablets. It was agreed that the make-believe drug- seeker would pay $100.00 for the first prescription and that the Respondent would provide similar prescriptions in the future for $50.00 per prescription. Towards the end of the first telephone conversation the Respondent told the make-believe drug-seeker that he had another matter to attend to and that she should call him later to arrange the time and place for the two of them to meet later that same evening. During the course of the first telephone conversation, which lasted for approximately 14 minutes, the Respondent made written notes of the answers given by the make-believe drug-seeker. Those notes were prepared in such a manner as to resemble the types of notes customarily made by physicians who are making a medical record of information elicited from a patient. A number of the details recorded in the Respondent's notes of the first telephone conversation were inconsistent with the information provided by the make-believe drug-seeker. Specifically, those notes contained a significant amount of information that was never uttered by the make-believe drug- seeker. The fictitious and false history details memorialized in the Respondent's notes are intentional falsehoods. Later that evening, at approximately 12:20am on January 21, 2005, Detective Coffin, still pretending to be the drug-seeking person named Melissa Beech, placed a second telephone call to the Respondent. She spoke with the Respondent for about three minutes on this occasion. Most of the second conversation consisted of providing the Respondent with information about the location where Detective Coffin would be waiting for him and information about where the Respondent should park when he arrived. Law enforcement officers of the HPD attempted to record both of the telephone conversations between the Respondent and Detective Coffin. Both of those attempts were unsuccessful. There is no recording of either of the telephone conversations. Sometime later that evening, during the early morning hours of January 21, 2005, the Respondent met the make-believe drug-seeker at the motel or efficiency apartment. He entered the room where the make-believe drug-seeker was pretending to be staying. Prior to his arrival, two cameras had been concealed in the room by the HPD police officers. During the entire time the Respondent was in the room the two cameras were attempting to record everything he said and everything he did, as well as everything said or done by the detective pretending to be the drug-seeking person named Melissa Beech. After entering the room, the Respondent spoke with the make-believe drug-seeker and asked her additional questions related to her request for a prescription for OxyContin. He made some written notes that purported to be summaries of her answers. During the course of the meeting with the make-believe drug-seeker the Respondent provided her with a document titled "Patient's Acknowledgement," which she signed, but did not read. That document contained information about the patient-physician relationship, about what was expected of the patient, and also memorialized the patient's informed consent to the treatment she was requesting from the Respondent. The Respondent also conducted a brief physical examination of the make-believe patient and made written notes that purported to be a memorialization of what he had observed during the course of his examination. The Respondent's examination of the make-believe drug-seeker included the following: check of pulse and blood pressure, check of reflex responses at several joints, and check of chest sounds with stethoscope. The Respondent performed a deep tendon reflex test on Detective Coffin by striking her wrists, elbows, and knees with a medical hammer. Detective Coffin's feet remained on the floor during this test. A deep tendon reflex test cannot be performed properly with the subject's feet touching the floor. Such a test performed in such a manner will not produce reliable results. The Respondent indicated in his written notes that he had examined Detective Coffin's head, eyes, ears, nose, and throat. However, the Respondent did not perform any examination at all of Detective Coffin's head, ears, nose, or throat. The Respondent perhaps performed a partial examination of Detective Coffin's eyes, but did not perform an adequate examination of her eyes. The Respondent indicated in his written notes that Detective Coffin's pupils were equal, round, and reactive to light and accommodation. However, the Respondent did not conduct any examination of Detective Coffin's eyes that was sufficient to support a conclusion that they were equal, round, and reactive to light and accommodation. The Respondent included in his written notes that Detective Coffin's chest and lungs were clear to auscultation and percussion. The Respondent did not examine Detective Coffin in a manner that could determine whether her chest and lungs were clear to auscultation and percussion. Therefore, the Respondent did not have any basis for writing that the detective's chest and lungs were clear to auscultation and percussion. The Respondent included in his written notes an observation that Detective Coffin's abdomen was soft. The Respondent never touched or otherwise examined Detective Coffin's abdomen. The Respondent had no factual basis for writing that Detective Coffin's abdomen was soft. In his written notes the Respondent indicated that Detective Coffin experienced pain upon lifting her leg thirty degrees. Detective Coffin never raised either leg in the Respondent's presence and never complained of pain in his presence. There was no factual basis for the subject notation. The Respondent never conducted a Rhomberg examination on Detective Coffin, but he included in his written notes an observation that a Rhomberg test was negative. There was no factual basis for such a notation. The Respondent included in his written notes an observation that he had examined Detective Coffin's gait. However, the Respondent never performed an adequate and sufficient examination of Detective Coffin's gait. The Respondent did not conduct a range of motion test of Detective Coffin. The Respondent never asked Detective Coffin to lift her leg towards her chest. Nor did he ask her to touch her toes. The Respondent never asked her to manipulate her body in any way. At no time during the encounter between Detective Coffin and the Respondent did Detective Coffin state that she was experiencing pain. At no time during that encounter did she behave or move in any manner that would suggest she was experiencing pain. To the contrary, Detective Coffin crossed and uncrossed her legs, alternatively slouched and sat up straight in her chair, and made other movements that would indicate to a reasonable prudent physician that she was not experiencing any pain at all. The Respondent never discussed with Detective Coffin the necessity of obtaining further MRIs, X-rays, or other forms of diagnostic testing. He never discussed any need to obtain and review any prior medical records. The Respondent never asked Detective Coffin to sign a medical records release document that would have authorized the Respondent to obtain prior medical records. The Respondent's written notations regarding his examination of the make-believe drug-seeker contain false information because, among other things, the notations contain the results of tests and examinations the Respondent did not perform. Such false notations are intentional falsehoods. The Respondent never discussed with Detective Coffin the need for a follow-up appointment. The Respondent never asked Detective Coffin for any form of identification. Under the circumstances presented in this case, a reasonable prudent physician would have performed a range of motion test and a leg-raising test, neither of which were performed by the Respondent. Under the circumstances presented in this case, a reasonably prudent physician would have established a treatment plan that would have included a schedule for follow-up visits, a review of prior medical records, and plans for future diagnostic tests. The Respondent did not establish any type of treatment plan. The prescription provided to Detective Coffin was inappropriate, unjustified, and excessive because the physical examination was inadequate, the medical record was falsified, and the patient never exhibited any sign of being in pain. Under the circumstances presented in this case, the Respondent's act of providing a prescription to a total stranger with no medical justification for doing so was an action taken other than in the course of the Respondent's professional practice. Ultimately, the Respondent wrote and delivered a prescription to the make-believe patient. The prescription was for sixty-two 80-milligram tablets of OxyContin. This was a 31- day supply if the OxyContin was taken as directed; one tablet every 12 hours. The Respondent wrote several warnings at the bottom of the prescription document. The warnings included such things as the fact that OxyContin impairs driving ability and may cause drowsiness, loss of balance, and/or loss of coordination. The Respondent also wrote on the prescription: "Must swallow whole and do not crush or break." Other law enforcement officers of the HPD were listening to and observing the events inside the room. Shortly after the Respondent handed the prescription to the make-believe patient and received the one hundred dollars from her, other law enforcement officers rushed into the room, arrested the Respondent, and seized various items of the Respondent's personal property, including the medical record he had been preparing regarding his care and treatment of the make-believe patient. With regard to obtaining information about the characteristics of, and the proper use of, specific drugs, medical doctors customarily rely on the information contained in the Physician Desk Reference (PDR) and on the information contained in the manufacturer's package insert that often accompanies a drug. The package insert for OxyContin includes the following information: (Following an initial caption reading WARNING) OxyContin Tablets are a controlled-release oral formulation of oxycodone hydrochloride indicated for the management of moderate to severe pain when a continuous, around-the- clock analgesic is needed for an extended period of time. * * * (Following caption reading CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY) Oxycodone is a pure agonist opioid whose principal therapeutic action is analgesia. *** With pure opioid agonist analgesics, there is no defined maximum dose; the ceiling to analgesic effectiveness is imposed only by side effects, the more serious of which may include somnolence and respiratory depression. * * * As with all opioids, the minimum effective plasma concentration for analgesia will vary widely among patients, especially among patients who have been previously treated with potent agonist opioids. As a result, patients must be treated with individualized titration of dosage to the desired effect. The minimum effective analgesic concentration of oxycodone for any individual patient may increase over time due to an increase in pain, the development of a new pain syndrome and/or the development of analgesic tolerance. * * * OxyContin Tablets are associated with typical opioid-related adverse experiences. There is a general relationship between increasing oxycodone plasma concentration and increasing frequency of dose-related opioid adverse experiences such as nausea, vomiting, CNS effects, and respiratory depression. In opioid-tolerant patients, the situation is altered by the development of tolerance to opioid-related side effects, and the relationship is not clinically relevant. As with all opioids, the dose must be individualized . . . because the effective analgesic dose for some patients will be too high to be tolerated by other patients. (Following caption reading WARNINGS) OxyContin 80 mg and 160 mg Tablets ARE FOR USE IN OPIOID-TOLERANT PATIENTS ONLY. These tablet strengths may cause fatal respiratory depression when administered to patients not previously exposed to opioids. * * * Concerns about abuse, addiction, and diversion should not prevent the proper management of pain. The development of addiction to opioid analgesics in properly managed patients with pain has been reported to be rare. However, data are not available to establish the true incidence of addiction in chronic pain patients.

Recommendation On the basis of the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that a final order be issued in this case to the following effect: Dismissing Counts One and Two of the Administrative Complaint; Concluding that the Respondent is guilty of having violated Section 458.331(1)(q), Florida Statutes, as charged in Count Three of the Administrative Complaint; and Imposing a penalty consisting of an administrative fine in the amount of ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00) and the revocation of the Respondent's license to practice medicine. DONE AND ENTERED this 26th day of June, 2006, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S MICHAEL M. PARRISH Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 26th day of June, 2006.

Florida Laws (10) 120.569120.5720.43456.073458.305458.326458.331766.102817.50893.03
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BOARD OF NURSING vs. GREGORY BURGESS STONE, 82-002506 (1982)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 82-002506 Latest Update: Apr. 29, 1983

Findings Of Fact Respondent, Gregory Burgess Stone, is a licensed practical nurse holding license number 0463451. Respondent was so licensed at all times relevant to this proceeding. Respondent was employed at Orlando Lutheran Towers Health Care Center, 300 East Church Street, Orlando, Florida, as a practical nurse at all times material hereto. During April, 1982, Respondent acted as the full-time medicine nurse on the 7:00 a.m. through 3:00 p.m. nursing shift at Orlando Lutheran Towers. Orlando Lutheran Towers utilizes the Unidose system of medication administration. The individual who administers the medication is required only to remove the appropriate dosage from the Unidose card which may contain from thirty to sixty doses of medication and thereafter record the administration of the medication on a medication administration record by inserting his initials under the appropriate date on the medication administration record format. Each patient at Orlando Lutheran Towers is assigned a Unidose card for each medication he may require. The patient's name and other pertinent information appear on a label placed on the front of the Unidose card. Respondent was intermittently relieved from duty in April by Gloria Underhill, another nurse-employee of Orlando Lutheran Towers. Underhill worked in place of Respondent on April 8, and the Respondent thereafter worked the intervening period from April 9 through April 12. Underhill returned to work in place of Respondent again on April 13, and in the course of administering medications, she observed that certain prescribed medications had not been administered between April 9 and April 13. Underhill ascertained this information because of the procedure she had previously followed. It was Underhill's general practice to place her initials not only on the medication administration record but also on the Unidose card next to the particular unit of medication she intended to administer. By comparing her initials with the physical presence of the succeeding units of medication in the Unidose card, she determined that the Respondent had apparently failed to administer medication to the following patients: PATIENT MEDICATION UNITS NOT RECEIVED 1. Lowe DDS 100 milligrams 4 2. Doze Corgard 40 milligrams 4 3. Miller TAM/LL 3 The medication administration record, however, indicated by the placement of the Respondent's initials that the foregoing medications had been received. Respondent speculated that he may have administered the medication by utilizing doses not taken by other patients. This possibility was not supported by the evidence and is rejected. Underhill's findings were given to the Director of Nursing and the Administrator of Orlando Lutheran Towers, who thereafter confronted Respondent with the Unidose card discrepancies. Respondent did not offer any explanation for the discrepancies and was therefore discharged from employment at Orlando Lutheran Towers.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is RECOMMENDED: That Petitioner enter a final order finding Respondent guilty of the violations of law charged in the Administrative Complaint and placing his license in a probationary status for two years. DONE and ORDERED this 18th day of March, 1983, in Tallahassee, Florida. R. T. CARPENTER, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 18th day of March, 1983. COPIES FURNISHED: W. Douglas Moody, Esquire 119 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 James M. Nicholas, Esquire 170 East Washington Street Orlando, Florida 32801 Helen P. Keefe, Executive Director Board of Nursing Department of Professional Regulation Room 504, 111 East Coastline Drive Jacksonville, Florida 32202 Fred Roche, Secretary Department of Professional Regulation 130 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301

Florida Laws (1) 464.018
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