Louisiana Insurance Comm. may fine Board for memo against CBS
A "bulletin" written and distributed by
Mark B. Kruse, D.C., President of the Louisiana Board of Chiropractic
Examiners, is being reviewed by the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance
and could result in a fine being levied for misrepresenting an official
statement.
The memo contained a warning about
Chiropractic Benefit Services (CBS) insurance policies and suggested that
"doctors ... may be placing themselves in a precarious position" by choosing
CBS. The bulletin item displayed a headline reading: "LA Department of
Insurance -- Medical Malpractice Insurance Info," giving the deliberate
impression that the information and the warning was issued by the Department
of Insurance.
However, it was quickly ascertained that
the headline was deceptive.
According to Paula P. Davis, Deputy
Commissioner with the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance, "The
Department of Insurance has not issued any statements, nor has the
Department rendered any opinions about, the CBS Medical Malpractice
Insurance policy."
Davis added that "The Department's legal
division is currently reviewing the statement to assess if any fines are
necessary," for the misleading memo, which was distributed to licensed
doctors throughout the state. She noted that Dr. Kruse told her the heading
of his statement was "written in error."
Dr. Kruse is the American Chiropractic
Association's Alternate Delegate for the State of Louisiana and has
certification in Chiropractic Sports Medicine, and from the American Board
of Chiropractic Orthopedists and the American Board of Chiropractic
Consultants.
"Most doctors are well aware that the
ACA has tried hard to discredit me and do as much damage as they can to the
World Chiropractic Alliance through me and my businesses," stated Terry A.
Rondberg, D.C., president of the WCA and CEO of Chiropractic Benefit
Services. "I have come to expect personal attacks, but it is a grave
violation of professional ethics for a member of a state board to provide
false information to the doctor just to attack me. If Dr. Kruse's error was
a deliberate one, he should face more than a fine. He should be removed from
the board so that he cannot abuse his power by taking similar actions
against me or any other doctor of chiropractic."
The headline wasn't the only incorrect
information in the memo, Dr. Rondberg said. "The entire memo was filled with
such totally erroneous and misleading statements that it is difficult to
believe it was not a deliberate and malicious effort to malign CBS," he
added.
In a letter to Louisiana doctors, he
noted that, "Dr. Kruse made a personal statement that amounted to rendering
an insurance decision, even though he has no training or expertise to do so.
He did not speak with CBS officials to obtain information on policy
coverage, nor did he consult with insurance experts in the state Insurance
Department. The result was a statement containing gross errors and
misinterpretations."
Among the disputed statements was one
claiming that, in CBS, "a Class 1 chiropractor stipulates that he/she
neither renders diagnosis nor makes referrals to medical practitioners."
This is not true, explained Timothy
Feuling, CBS President. "Class 1 chiropractors do diagnose, although they
choose to limit their services to the diagnosis of vertebral subluxation
complex. Louisiana state statute specifies that the chiropractic scope of
practice includes 'the diagnosing of conditions associated with the
functional integrity of the spine.' Vertebral subluxation is such a
condition and is within the scope of practice," Feuling stressed.
"Nothing in any federal or state law
mandates that a licensed health provider offer ALL services allowed in a
scope of practice statute," the CBS letter explained. "That is, D.C.s and
other providers are permitted to select which services they wish to offer,
as long as those services are within the scope of practice."
This concept of limited scope is so
important that some states expressly make a note of it. California, for
instance, lists the various services D.C.s are licensed to provide, but
states specifically that a duly licensed chiropractor "is not required to
use all of the diagnostic and treatment modalities set forth in this
section."
The same applies to all health care
providers. Dentists may be permitted by their scope of practice law to
perform extractions or root canal, but many choose not to do so in their
office. General medical practitioners may exclude pregnancy care and
childbirth services, even though permitted by law to offer those services.
CBS officials have also contacted the
Louisiana State Attorney General's office about the Krause memo, and have
asked for a ruling about limited scope of practice for chiropractors.