LOS ANGELES, July 31, 2007

Doc Accused Of Hastening Death For Organs

Lawyer Denies Charges Calif. Dr. Gave Patient Excessive Drugs

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(CBS/AP)  The lawyer for a surgeon charged with prescribing excessive drugs to a disabled patient to speed up his death and harvest his organs says his client has been the subject of a "witch hunt."

Prosecutors in San Luis Obispo County said Dr. Hootan Roozrokh, 33, of San Francisco, gave a harmful drug and prescribed excessive doses of morphine and a sedative to 25-year-old Ruben Navarro, who died in 2006.

Prosecutors and a lawyer for Navarro's family contend Roozrokh told hospital staff, "Let's give him more candy," when referring to the drugs, reports CBS News correspondent Sandra Hughes.

Roozrokh was charged Monday in the first such criminal case against a transplant doctor in the U.S., the county district attorney's office said.

M. Gerald Schwartzbach, Roozrokh's lawyer, called the charges "unfounded and ill-advised," saying his client "has unfairly been the subject of an 18-month witch hunt."

"Nothing that Dr. Roozrokh did or said at the hospital that night adversely affected the quality of Mr. Navarro's life or contributed to Mr. Navarro's eventual death," Schwartzbach said in a statement.

Roozrokh planned to surrender and post $10,000 bail, Schwartzbach said.

Navarro was taken in a coma to Sierra Vista Regional Medical Center, 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles, in 2006 after suffering respiratory and cardiac arrest. Although Navarro was found to have irreversible brain damage and was kept on a respirator, he was not considered brain dead because he still had limited brain function.

The day before Navarro died, his family gave approval for a surgical team to recover his organs for donation. That didn't happen, however, because Navarro didn't die within 30 minutes of being removed from life support. He died a day later.

Roozrokh, a surgeon at Kaiser Permanente's now-closed kidney transplant program, was working at the time on behalf of a group that procures and distributes organs.

David Merlin, the former head of that program blew the whistle on mismanagement there.

"There is very little oversight of transplant programs in the United States," Merlin told Hughes.

The prosecutor's office said in a statement that the drugs were prescribed "to accelerate Mr. Navarro's death in order to recover his organs."

State law prohibits transplant surgeons from being involved in the treatment of potential organ donors before they are declared dead.

Prosecutors did not pursue murder charges because witnesses said they did not believe the drugs caused Navarro's death.

The coroner's office this year determined Navarro died of natural causes. Last month, his mother, Rosa, filed a wrongful-death and medical malpractice lawsuit against Roozrokh and others, claiming her son was removed from life support without her permission and given lethal doses of drugs.

"There was no consent to inject him with lethal doses or morphine and Atavin, and no legal consent to take his organs in the first place," Kevin Chaffin, lawyer for Rosa Navarro, told Hughes.

Navarro, who weighed about 80 pounds, was born with a neurological disorder known as adrenoleukodystrophy. He also had cerebral palsy and seizures.

Roozrokh was charged with felony counts of dependent adult abuse, administering a harmful substance and unlawful controlled substance prescription. If convicted of all three counts, he faces up to eight years in state prison or up to one year in jail and a $20,000 fine as a condition of probation.


© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Add a Comment See all 58 Comments
by extremophil August 1, 2007 1:55 PM EDT
It's a lot of trouble just to get organs. I like the piano better.
Reply to this comment
by zertrat August 1, 2007 2:02 AM EDT

"Doc Accused Of Hastening Death For Organs"

Really? My dog is not that clever. He would like the organs, for sure. Oh...wait. Doc. Not Dog. My bad. Sorry.
Reply to this comment
by tuffer6 August 1, 2007 1:25 AM EDT
My loved was had a car accident that damaged her lungs, and was kept comatose to keep her calm enough to accept the respirator. We were told of multiple interventions and given great hope for her recovery. Then, a doctor walked in and pronounced her "unsavable". Two of us who are medical professionals did not agree with the assessment, but the doctor convinced our loved one's spouse to stop life-saving procedures that caused her to go downhill.

Then, the spouse was asked to donate her organs. I volunteered to oversee removal of life support to verify her death, and the "organ people" agreed, so the spouse signed. I will make a long story short by saying that I was ultimately forbidden to oversee her "death". I will spare you the details, but the spouse was too filled with sorrow to stay, and then could not be reached to withdraw his consent.

With her not having been brain-dead, we have all been horrified at the thought that her organs were probably removed while she was still on life support to better preserve her kidneys - the part they were most interested in.
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by msconcerned July 31, 2007 11:14 PM EDT
This story may be the tip of the iceberg about the a small fraction of transplant specialists making the GOD decisions on who deserves to live or not live longer as well as deciding on who gets the organs and who doesn't.
Historically, it is known that if a person, in need of an organ, had attempted sicide in the past (even 20 years ago), even though he or she will never again do it again will be passed up for an organ without their knowledge resulting in the organ being given to someone else.
In the present, however, will the organs be taken out, like this CBS story, from a person who is physically or mentally disabled? It's scary that the possibility is out there.
In the future, will the medical guidelines/decisions be changed so that noone's life will be shortened no matter what the disability may be that the dying human being has?
No one should play GOD. Not even physicians - PERIOD!!
Reply to this comment
by pbarfar July 31, 2007 11:03 PM EDT
just because he had shortcomings at birth he should have been let to die naturally, but it seems that the doctor was in a hurry and didn't even get the organs. i worked with ruben and even though he had physical disabilities, he had fully functional mind. he was a happy young man.
and a joy to be around. it is sad that this is also going to make people afraid to donate thier organs because it will make them think that doctoer won't try to save them or will hasten thier deaths if the md wants thier organs.
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 July 31, 2007 9:30 PM EDT
Hmmm, maybe Bill O'Reilly has a point about San Francisco, thanks to Hooter's despicable actions. (Well, this so called doctor is obviously a boob...)
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 July 31, 2007 8:43 PM EDT
Once again political hatred by the right is blinding them from the facts. Where I work over half the doctors are from India, and many from China. Same story in the technology department. Do you know why? No, it's not the "Dems". It's the U.S. CORPORATIONS that you glamorize, that import them from abroad because they are cheaper than American workers.
Posted by incog-nito at 03:55 PM : Jul 31, 2007
-------------------------

I must agree. Not only are they 'cheaper', no doubt the work is cheap and horror stories like this... are corporations as pro-life as the politicians they donate big bucks to?
Reply to this comment
by adian1-2009 July 31, 2007 8:32 PM EDT
Judgment without knowing the complete set of facts is unwarranted, to say the least. It could very well be that the prosecutor got the news that a civil action had been filed. If such a lawsuit had not been filed, probably the prosecutor would not have charged this physician. From what we can gather from the story, the patient had some grave health shortcomings since birth. American society is the most litigious in the world. Why? Money. And there are always lawyers looking for money, for their clients, yes, but not out of generosity. They are looking for money for themselves, no matter if the lawsuit is frivoulous or well founded.
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by mrseverett-2009 July 31, 2007 7:46 PM EDT
aldewitt - thank you. you have helped bring some maturity to this forum.
Reply to this comment
by aldewitt-2009 July 31, 2007 7:40 PM EDT
It may be pallitive care, but generally prosecutors are not the people to evaluate that. I would suspect that the prosecutor had this reviewed by the medical examiner and a couple of docs before he filed the charges. You would have to have good evidence before you'd file a charge like this. Trying a doctor for criminal conduct is tough, and convincing a jury that the doctor did harm is not as easy as it seems. He will have a competent defense, you can count on that.

I do not believe that his race or national origin has anything to do with his competence. If you do not like foreign medical graduates, my view is you shouldn't go to one.

Reply to this comment
by mrseverett-2009 July 31, 2007 7:39 PM EDT
Greenwood, July 20: For years, doctors recruited from India, the Philippines and sub-Saharan Africa helped offset the dearth of qualified medical professionals in poverty-stricken US regions.

But in the wake of the terror concerns and the national immigration debate, health officials and some lawmakers worry that increasing restrictions and scrutiny threaten to undermine efforts to bring these doctors to regions where many US-born doctors are loath to work, and exacerbate the shortage of physicians in the country as a whole.
Reply to this comment
by incog-nito July 31, 2007 6:55 PM EDT
"The Dems - and our own - dumming down of America."

Posted by usatheway98 at 11:04 AM : Jul 31, 2007

Once again political hatred by the right is blinding them from the facts. Where I work over half the doctors are from India, and many from China. Same story in the technology department. Do you know why? No, it's not the "Dems". It's the U.S. CORPORATIONS that you glamorize, that import them from abroad because they are cheaper than American workers. So try to do some thinking before posting idiotic comments with no basis on reality whatsoever.
Reply to this comment
by mrseverett-2009 July 31, 2007 6:25 PM EDT
well in our case the morphine was not abusive, but I can understand that some doctors are only interested in the end result be it a transplant or just one less patient to worry about. The point of this case seems to be did he kill someone for organs, but people are using it as an excuse to make racial judgements on doctors they don't even know. I agree with goAmerica that we as people need to educate ourselves because the media is not going to give us the entire story.
Reply to this comment
by hissteps4u July 31, 2007 6:10 PM EDT
Morphine does indeed hasten death and decreases respirations and suppress them thus hastening death. Its the Most common drug used for such things as well as its derivatives like Roxanol most often used by Nursing homes along with Ativan for anxiety.

Its a peaceful way to end ones life pain free but to abuse it is wrong and if the DR did this out of abuse he needs to be held accountable.

As a retired Nurse with Hospice I have not seen DR's abuse such drugs and would have reported it had i seen such we are First Responders and Mandatory Reporters of such things.
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by cdfoxtrot July 31, 2007 5:16 PM EDT
This is the kind of thing that makes people nervous about signing up to be an organ donor.
Reply to this comment
by gunshack1 July 31, 2007 5:09 PM EDT
Sounds like palliative care to me. Have all the prosecutting attorneys in this country gone nuts?
Reply to this comment
by mrseverett-2009 July 31, 2007 4:30 PM EDT
After my father was had cancer surgery and the doctors knew he was near death, huge amounts of morphine was given to him. For the first time in years, I saw peace on his face and he died holding my mother's hand. I don't know if the drugs made his death faster, but at that point it helped make his life better. Would this be getting the venomous comments from some people on this forum if it had been a doctor named Jones or Smith.
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by sunseeker6 July 31, 2007 4:12 PM EDT
Sounds like the Doctor did nothing wrong. The man was going to die anyway, why let him suffer longer. Let him go to God. The Mother just wants money and 15 minutes of fame. By the way Wadyaknow, stem cell research is happening. The Federal Government is just not funding embryonic stem cell research. And finally, the Democrats also have good liars, there's all the Kennedy's (John, Robert, Ted, Patrick, etc), the Clintons (remember Whitewater and insider trading), just to name a few.
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by random_radar July 31, 2007 4:05 PM EDT
Okay, so they took him off life support so he would die, and that is not murder. But prescribing drugs to hasten his death once he is off life support is murder? I just don't follow the logic...
Reply to this comment
by dylanxxv July 31, 2007 3:35 PM EDT
The guy was pretty much dead already and he was not going to pull out of it, so leave the Doctor alone...
And the mother suing? She is crazy insane for money...That is a frivolous lawsuit and she should be b itch slapped and fined very heavily for wasting the courts time...
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