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The Medical Board’s case against addiction treatment specialist Miles Stanich dates back more than 15 years and blames him in part for the death of two patients.
According to the Medical Board’s accusation, Stanich committed “gross negligence, repeated negligent acts and incompetence” in his treatment of a patient who had been “found dead, lying on his back, an empty syringe in his hand.” Stanich gave that patient a powerful narcotic (OxyContin), without obtaining a “social, addiction, or psychiatric history, nor did he perform a physical examination.”
The Medical Board’s case against addiction treatment specialist Miles Stanich dates back more than 15 years and blames him in part for the death of two patients.
According to the Medical Board’s accusation, Stanich committed “gross negligence, repeated negligent acts and incompetence” in his treatment of a patient who had been “found dead, lying on his back, an empty syringe in his hand.” Stanich gave that patient a powerful narcotic (OxyContin), without obtaining a “social, addiction, or psychiatric history, nor did he perform a physical examination.”
The Medical Board’s case against addiction treatment specialist Miles Stanich dates back more than 15 years and blames him in part for the death of two patients.
According to the Medical Board’s accusation, Stanich committed “gross negligence, repeated negligent acts and incompetence” in his treatment of a patient who had been “found dead, lying on his back, an empty syringe in his hand.” Stanich gave that patient a powerful narcotic (OxyContin), without obtaining a “social, addiction, or psychiatric history, nor did he perform a physical examination.”