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State Medical Board sends citation to Temponeras
Sep 14, 2012 | 23067 views | 7 7 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print
State of Ohio Medical Board Letter of Citation to Dr. Margy Temponeras
download State of Ohio Medical Board Letter of Citation to Dr. Margy Temponeras

FRANK LEWIS

PDT Staff Writer

The Ohio State Medical Board was in the process Thursday of sending a letter to former Wheelersburg pain clinic operator, Dr. Margy Temponeras, advising her the board approved a citation at its Wednesday meeting, based on the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to revoke her DEA certificate on Aug. 31, 2012; and on her prescribing controlled substances to a patient while in a personal relationship with the patient, and that the Board intends to determine whether or not to limit, revoke, permanently revoke, suspend, refuse to register or reinstate her certificate to practice medicine and surgery, or to reprimand her or place her on probation.

Temponeras was one of four physicians who had their Drug Enforcement Administration certificates suspended following an investigation by federal, state and local law enforcement agencies on pain clinics in Scioto County on May 17, 2011. The other doctors included Temponeras’ father, Dr. John Temponeras, Dr. Mark Fantazuzzi and Dr. Michael Dawes. Dr. John Temponeras eventually surrendered his license.

The Medical Board indefinitely suspended Margy Temponeras’ license due to the DEA’s Order to Show Cause and Immediate Suspension of her DEA registration and that suspension remains in effect.

According to the citation, on or about Jan. 11, 2012, the Board issued an Entry of Order, with an effective date of Jan. 27, 2012, that suspended her certificate to practice medicine and surgery for an indefinite period of time for a violation of Section 4731.22(B)(24), Ohio Revised Code. Effective Aug. 31, 2012, her DEA certificate of registration was revoked, and any pending application to renew or modify her registration was denied.

The citation goes on to say that at a hearing on Oct. 20, 2011, Temponeras’ attorney called a witness, referred to in documents as Patient 3, on her behalf.

The citation cites a DEA Order that reads - “Patient 3 testified that you had prescribed controlled substances to him, and that such prescribing occurred at the same time you were in a personal relationship with him. Further, your prescribing of controlled substances to Patient 3 was not in an emergency situation.”

The DEA order reads that Diversion Investigator Albert testified at the hearing as a part of her investigation that she reviewed ARCOSsystem data pertaining to all the Oxycodone products Temponeras had ordered from the opening of the dispensary in 2008 until her last order in May of 2011, finding a total of “approximately 1.6 million dosage units” of Oxycodone.

In accordance with Chapter 119 of the Ohio Revised Code, the letter advises Temponeras she is entitled to a hearing, and if she wishes to request such a hearing, the request must be made in writing and must be received in the offices of the State Medical Board within 30 days of the mailing of the notice. It further advises that, if she requests a hearing in a timely manner, she is entitled to appear at the hearing in person, or by her attorney, or by such other representative as is permitted to practice before that agency, or she may present her position, arguments, or contentions in writing, and that at the hearing she may present evidence and examine witnesses appearing for or against her.

The letter goes on to says if no request for a hearing is received within 30 days, the State Medical Board may, in her absence and upon consideration of the matter, determine whether or not to limit, revoke, permanently remove, suspend, refuse to register or reinstate her certificate to practice medicine and surgery or to reprimand her or place her on probation.

Frank Lewis may bde reached at 740-353-3101, ext. 232, or at flewis@heartlandpublications.com



Comments
(7)
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xcitizen
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September 14, 2012
yojoe

Apparently you never read my replies but ABSOLUTELY YOU HAVE SOLVED NO DRUG PROBLEM. All Scioto County has done is put a bandaid on a broken leg. Why does no one listen, I have the answer. Oxycontin has the same effect as heroin and heroin is cheaper. It will also kill you much quicker. So what went wrong here:

Step 1 - Set up a recovery program (oops)

Step 2 - Step up Police and add FBI (check)

Step 3 - Shut down dirty doctors (check)

Step 4 - Publicize treatment programs (oops)

Step 5 - Educate Public and kids (oops)

Step 6 - Wait for the addicts to die (in process)

Everyone jumped right to step 3 and now we wonder why the problem didn't go away. You didn't solve it. All you did was delay it. Why is it impossible for you people to understand that simply taking away the drug isn't enough. They will are are turning to heroin which guess what is cheaper and easier to get because you don't have to find a dirty doctor. Until Scioto County gets some real help because the counseling center is crap and has about a 95% relapse rate. Huh these other centers for help that use medication are more around the 60% level but don't try that because the head doctor doesn't believe in it. Jesus, I am so sick of hearing the residents and addicts complain when the answer is right in front of them. Provide Suboxone for free. Overnight success. If a suboxone clinic opened tomorrow in Portsmouth it would be full up and the communtiy would notice an immediate change. You have to provide help for the people that want it. If there is no cure, addiction will win and these people will continue to use.

YOJOE, no you stil have a drug problem and until someone with some sense starts looking to help the addicts, you are going to get worse. Heroin is worse and will cause more crime and deaths than you ever thought oxycontin could. Welcome to the next phase in the failure to cure Scioto County. Keep listening to Dr. Johnson and his 5% success rate.
fred81
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September 14, 2012
The only way for the USA to beat this drug problem is to legalize EVERY drug. That means heroin, meth, crack, speed, pot and all of the others. Tax them and regulate them thru a system like the state liquor agency. The big argument is that there would be an explosion of drug use. I don't think so. If heroin or meth was legal tomorrow I really don't think people who have never done drugs will give it a try just for kicks. This will never happen though because the US and the states make too much money confiscating property and filling up jails and prisons.

People will do drugs. Always have and always will. Why not TAX and REGULATE them like alcohol???
officemanager08
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September 14, 2012
YoJoe, while I agree with many of your statements, I do disagree about Suboxone. As an employee of a Dr's office we use urine drug screens quite frequently and more and more patients are testing positive for Suboxone. The reason being is that it is now just as addictive as Methadone when it was used for detox. An addict will use whatever is available to them to get their high. A doctor's office can stop prescribing pain medications and get in trouble from the Board for not "giving adequate care" and then when they do prescribe what is "beneficial" for patient care, they are criticized for over-prescribing. An addict is an addict whether laws are in place or not. I agree with you 100% that there needs to be more resources available for FREE. In my opinion this includes rehab centers and support groups not Suboxone. This is a pandemic that is out of control.
yojoe
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September 14, 2012
Over 4000 views in less than a half hour?

Must have Ipads on the Streets after Midnight?

Interesting.

Do we really have the addiction problem solved.

What if you feds would tack the views? Hah.

Wow, just have known this and be one of the authorities?

belindawente
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September 13, 2012
Good for her hope she never has a practice agin and for her sorry dad hope he gets what he has coming to him also
dws57
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September 13, 2012
they should pull her medical license for ever she's worst kind of drug dealer, she knew what the long term outlook of these drug were before she prescribed them to the people. she is a highly trained drug pusher, that to help anyone, but her own pockets... she should be locked up just like any other drug dealer is...
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