- Joined
- Apr 22, 2007
- Messages
- 2,387
- Reaction score
- 129
Every post of yours I read, I question the fact you being a physician.
Where are your ethics ??
This person is a drug dealer, plain and simple. If you had bothered to watch this cringe inducing video ( I suggest you do so) , it's blatantly obvious she uses leading questions in order for her "patients" to qualify for "medical marijuana".
Her lack of physical exam and informed consent are hardly surpising considering her stunning lack of professionalism.
She's not a smart " businesswoman"; to somehow justify her behavior by way of her family practice training is just idiotic.
It's just weed. Jesus. This woman is doing God's work. God forbid she's not pretending like she needs to do a goddamn rectal exam to allow you to smoke a joint. The law has given her the authority to sign her name and allow someone to get stoned. She's doing it and making a living at the same time. Win win.
The nice thing about graduating med school is you get to stop worrying about all the Dudley Dooright's in medicine, and you get to do what you see fit, provided it's not illegal. As she's doing. Check and mate.
I'm curious, now that a few folks have commented on this: where are we getting that she's only done one or two years of residency? A quick search on California's medical board site indicates she completed residency and is BE but not BC?
As to judging her to be hugely successful based on her website? My take is that it's an ego thing (look at the ostentatious nouveau-riche real estate porn shots for crissake). There's no shortage of docs like her. take BART and you see lots of advertisements much more geared towards the MJ crowd. She's one of many....
well state boards reall only go after the most egregious of cases....
also, and a point nobody has brought up, what exactly is she doing that the state board could go after?
QUOTE]
charging only for the card- and not for the evaluation itself -could be a problem. It would be like a pain clinic stating that there would be no charge if there wasn't a prescription for opioids
I've actually heard of pain clinics(not outright pill mills) offering to "rip up the ticket" early on in the eval when they make it clear to the pt they wont get pain meds
I've actually heard of pain clinics(not outright pill mills) offering to "rip up the ticket" early on in the eval when they make it clear to the pt they wont get pain meds
I have done something similar a few times myself. There is a difference in occasionally doing that to get an upset patient out the door than advertising it as a policy (to get patients in the door).
I have a couple questions for the rest of us:
1) How many times have you encountered evidence of seriously substandard (or even dangerous) practice by a physician; in the form of ridiculous med regimen, grossly inaccurate diagnosis, dangerous manipulation of medications (up or down much too fast), or stories from patients of wholly improper behavior, etc.? Reading SDN, it looks like we encounter this a lot.
2) How many times have you personally reported suspicions of dangerous practice to the medical board?
It seems to me that if we are so sure of others' dangerous or seriously substandard practice that we gripe about it here, then we ought to have the courage to report those suspicions to the Medical Board. We are not required to have evidence sufficient to indict in order to report. Even just a patient story, or certainly several patient stories about the same doctor, should be enough to report the suspicion.
I know, nobody wants to the guy who reports everybody else and gets a reputation of being a tattletale. But we complain that the Medical Board does nothing, when we haven't given them anything to investigate.
Perhaps we need to put up or shut up.
And I sincerely include myself in that category.
She only seems business savvy if you don't know much about business. What does having a dating service on her website have to do with anything? With all the competition that's the equivalent of starting a small cottage eBay. Doomed.I know....but most of the people like her don't look like she does. Or are as business saavy. Hell she has a dating service on her website.
Agree. This is like Frank Lopez telling Tony Montana in Scarface that the ones that survive in that business are the ones that don't get too greedy. You pick out a good lot, keep with it, make good money but don't get too greedy.
She's basically making a target on her back. Yeah, maybe nothing will happen now with the current legal state, but like most people you want to be working this business for a few decades. Seriously, she could be setting herself up for some type of clientele most people will not want. I have enough problems with ticked off Suboxone patients and I'm doing it by the book with that.
And this is besides the point that what she's doing is completely unprofessional, unethical, and someone ought to be taking action against her.
I see no evidence she has any business savvy at all.
And this is besides the point that what she's doing is completely unprofessional, unethical, and someone ought to be taking action against her.
It's about a lady putting herself in bikini calendar, getting that calendar to her patients, and then offering marijuana for pretty much anything, opening the flood gates for someone not wanting it for real medical treatment.
QUOTE]
opening??? They've been open for some time....
99.9% of the insane number of mj cards out there i california are for people "not wanting it for real treatment"
So blame california, or the people in california. Blame the original law for making it legal for pts to have "medical" marijuana for very vague and nonspecified reasons. Even if the cali board of med examiers wanted to go after people like this(and they dont) they would be somewhat hamstrung by the state itself.....
She is practicing legally. And she is doing what tons of other "docs" are doing. Really cant take action against her without opening up a whole can of worms. And she knows it; thats why she does it so out in the open
A flash house doesn't mean she's running a great practice. Could be from her Bollywood days. Could be an inheritance. Could be a rental property designed to impress folks who ooh and ah over lots of gold leaf and 70's-style opulence. Or it could all come from her practice which is high risk, high volume and declining profit (based on her price slashing). Again, no sign of business savvy as we usually use the term...ummm....her house isn't evidence of that? what...did she buy that with coupons?
A flash house doesn't mean she's running a great practice. Could be from her Bollywood days. Could be an inheritance. Could be a rental property designed to impress folks who ooh and ah over lots of gold leaf and 70's-style opulence. Or it could all come from her practice which is high risk, high volume and declining profit (based on her price slashing). Again, no sign of business savvy as we usually use the term...
well the point is she bought(or rents) that house, and in that area that house costs major $$$$.....if she got that by practicing "medicine", then by definition she has been business saavy because she would have had to acquire a lot of money/have a lot of income to reside in such a house
Yeesh.
I often find myself wishing that pot would just be legal already so as to avoid the farce that "medical marijuana" often turns into. I'm kinda glad we don't have it here. Very glad, actually.
A flash house doesn't mean she's running a great practice. Could be from her Bollywood days. Could be an inheritance. Could be a rental property designed to impress folks who ooh and ah over lots of gold leaf and 70's-style opulence. Or it could all come from her practice which is high risk, high volume and declining profit (based on her price slashing). Again, no sign of business savvy as we usually use the term...
There's alot of personal experience and documentation regarding marijuana psychosis esp in young men with a propensity to schizophrenia, but this is never mentioned. Why?
My knowledge of heroin's intricacies is limited, but isn't it a derivative of the opium poppy.
In other words, various processes have to be done to it's natural state in order to become the final product: "heroin".
...In opposition to marijuana that can be picked right off the plant and smoked as is for full-effect.
Natural? Guess it's up to personal interpretation.
And much like American film, there are different calibers of "Bollywood."
I know nothing about business (really, I don't), but isn't that kind of like saying Bernie Madoff was obviously savvy about business since he had lots of money at one point? Time will tell.
Come on guys she charged ~100$ a pop for referrals for about 5 years before competition caused her to slowly lower prices to where she is now. She worked 7 days a week in a news article I read about her years ago. If she did 20 MJ referrals a day x 7 days a week at 100$, that is around 600K cash per year. Who knows how many patients she saw, 20 probably is a low estimate per day given her popularity. She has 2 clinics right now. I think she had 3 before.
There's alot of personal experience and documentation regarding marijuana psychosis esp in young men with a propensity to schizophrenia, but this is never mentioned. Why?
Yes, exactly! There are hundreds of quality studies, and here's a sample, including the 2007 systematic review from "The Lancet"
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17662880
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17925811
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20194820
Yeah I have a small sample size of cases I knew where normal-functioning people had a psychotic episode after MJ intoxication too. And a n = 1 for same with LSD.
What I wonder though is if there is some underlying propensity for psychosis that the psychotropic effect of weed triggers or if these people experienced psychosis purely as a result of the weed. I don't believe the cited research make the distinction...? Given, I haven't the time to make sure.
Yeah I have a small sample size of cases I knew where normal-functioning people had a psychotic episode after MJ intoxication too. And a n = 1 for same with LSD.
What I wonder though is if there is some underlying propensity for psychosis that the psychotropic effect of weed triggers or if these people experienced psychosis purely as a result of the weed. I don't believe the cited research make the distinction...? Given, I haven't the time to make sure.
Last I took a look at the literature, there are some components of marijuana that likely cause psychosis(delta-9-thc), and some that may be protective (cannabidiol). The problem is marijuana isn't one or the other, and that these days it is genetically modified to have excessively high THC.
I've read the same as well, in fact I've also been told at a conference that one of the main reasons why synthetic cannabinoids are of worse concern vs. marijuana is they apparently don't have cannabidiol, and thus in theory are far worse vs. marijuana in terms of causing or exacerbating psychosis.
From anectdotal experience, I'm seeing this in real life. I've had a few patients get very psychotic from synthetic cannabinoids, to a degree I have not seen with marijuana.
There is data, as mentioned above, that marijuana can cause or worsen psychosis. There was a study in the Green Journal about 3 years ago showing patients in a group that took cannabinoids already at high risk develop a psychotic disorder in higher amounts vs. those that did not use cannabinoids.
Back in my high school to college days, my attitude was marijuana was a far less serious substance vs. alcohol, but given the above data, I speculate that several-perhaps on the order of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of people that developed schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder may have not developed it at all if they did not try marijuana, and/or they may have developed it later in life-that usually leads to an improved disease course and prognosis.
For the above reasons, even if marijuana were made legal, I'd still recommend it be given out in the most controlled manner possible and only for treatment resistant cases or for terminal cases.
Wow. Interesting. Then that comprises a frameshift in my conception of a hierarchy of harm with recreational drugs as well, given the seriousness of the psychotic complication.
If this is true, then it is a wonder that the research has not surfaced in the public consciousness. Perhaps there's just too many stupid reasons why it remains illegal for recreational use. That boil down to a paternal....because I said so, such that rational objections to it's use get smothered.
Cigarettes are legal. So.....?
But I'm glad I read this deep into the thread because I need to take another look at those citations.