| Article published
Jun 15, 2004 Herrera to get license back Montgomery County judge reverses commission's decision MONTGOMERY - A Montgomery County judge on Monday ordered the state medical licensing agency to immediately reinstate the license of Gadsden doctor Pascual Herrera Jr. Circuit Judge Johnny Hardwick in a 24-page order told the Alabama Medical Licensure Commission to reinstate Herrera's medical license "and his right to practice medicine forthwith and without any further delay." Herrera said he was
pleased with the decision, but wasn't sure how soon his medical license
would be reinstated. "I'm excited because I've been waiting for this for
quite a while," Herrera said in a telephone interview Herrera, who was
bitter over the commission's April 2001 decision to revoke his license,
said he may try to re-establish a practice in Gadsden. He said it's an
uphill climb even though a revoked license is reinstated. Agricola said.
"There was no testimony that Dr. Herrera prescribed OxyContin to any of
these teenagers." Herrera said he "fired" one patient who demanded
OxyContin. OxyContin is a powerful pain reliever that can kill if used
illegally and incorrectly Testimony against Herrera centered on allegedly
inadequate record keeping and his poor handwriting. But Hardwick, in his
final judgment, wrote there was no substantial evidence that Herrera's
treatment strategy for patients endangered anyone's health. Hardwick said the
record demonstrates that Herrera had compassion for his patients, treated
them without regard to whether they could pay and even made house
calls."Given the scant evidence presented by the Board to supports its
charges, the court is left with the unmistakable belief that the `MLC' was
motivated to revoke Dr. Herrera's license to practice medicine by
something other than the evidence presented to it," Hardwick said."However
the evidence in this case cries out for reversal," he said.Agricola said
the evidence presented to the Medical Licensure Commission by the Board of
Medical Examiners failed to satisfy the legal standard for substantial
evidence to support the charges against him.Herrera, 49, said he believes
he was singled out for treatment because he is foreign-born, does not
belong to a large group of physicians and isn't affiliated with a
hospital. He said the main testimony against him was by a family
practitioner who reviewed his records but never interviewed his patients
or doctors who substituted for him when he was recuperating from an
automobile accident. |