Sunday, February 12

Doctor Groups Flex Muscle In Capitol: $2.3 Million in Campaign Cash to Influence Health-Care Reform

News The State Capitol has been abuzz the last couple of days because of a hot list (PDF) circulating in ... More

Feb 10, 2012 06:00 pm by NIGEL JAQUISS  | Comments 3
 

Nonsense Knows No State Boundary: Washington Legislators Get Bogus Job Claims on CRC

News Up north of here, Washington legislators in Olympia are debating whether or not they should authoriz... More

Feb 10, 2012 09:09 am  | Comments 1
 

Occupy Arrestees Win Their Right to Full Trials—Even Though They May Not Need It

News The estimated 160 people arrested during Occupy Portland protests in the past five months have won t... More

Feb 9, 2012 01:24 pm by HANNAH HOFFMAN  | Comments 2
 

Almost Live: Rockets at Blazers

News So I'm having a bit of trouble with the picture, which is coming from my phone (I drew it on my way ... More

Feb 8, 2012 07:09 pm by CASEY JARMAN  | Comments 0
 
 
 
Home · Articles · News · News · Natural Disaster
May 30th, 2007 JAMES PITKIN | News
 

Natural Disaster

Out-of-court settlement resolves what's believed to be Oregon's first naturopath-caused death.

39 Comments
     
Tags:
Sandy Boylan (pictured in this 2001 photo) died in 2003 after visiting a naturopath for chelation therapy.

Sandy Boylan was a contagiously cheerful woman whose hobby was handing out bouquets of homegrown flowers. But in the summer of 2003, she was scared.

The 53-year-old B&B owner from Dallas, Ore., had been told by her naturopathic physician that she had dangerously high levels of mercury, lead, cadmium and nickel. She believed those metals caused the aches and pains she'd long suffered—the ones that had confounded traditional doctors for years.

On Aug. 13, 2003, Boylan visited the naturopath who had made the diagnosis—Donald McBride of the Salem Naturopathic Clinic. McBride was giving Boylan a controversial course of treatment in his office called chelation therapy (see "Curing Jamie Handley," WW, Oct. 12, 2005), where amino acids are administered intravenously to suck metals out of the blood.

But chelation also withdraws metals the body needs, including calcium, which can lead to heart failure. Hooked up to the IV, Boylan collapsed and blacked out. She was taken to Salem Memorial Hospital, where she died that day of cardiac arrhythmia due to low calcium resulting from chelation therapy, according to a report by the state Medical Examiner.

On May 4, 2007, Sandy Boylan's husband, Clint, signed an out-of-court settlement ending a malpractice and wrongful-death suit against McBride. Family members declined to say how much McBride agreed to pay, except to note it was far less than the $1 million they sought in the lawsuit filed Feb. 28, 2005, at Marion County Circuit Court. Naturopaths aren't required to carry malpractice insurance. And McBride, who signed the settlement April 27, declined to comment.

The state Naturopathic Board of Examiners conducted a separate investigation, and Boylan's death is believed to be the first directly caused by a naturopath, says board director Anne Walsh.

The board licenses and polices naturopaths, but learned of the death only by chance 16 months after the fact. Boylan's sister, Cindy Bethell—sustainability manager at the Portland Development Commission—told a professional associate at the Centers for Disease Control about her sister's death. He contacted a colleague in Oregon, and in December 2005, word finally got to the state naturopathic board.

The board determined it was McBride's negligence that killed Boylan but let him keep his license with some limits on his Salem practice. Citing state confidentiality laws, Walsh declined to comment on the decision.

But the fact that McBride could again do chelation therapy astonishes and angers Boylan's family.

"My mom is no longer here because of negligence," says Eli Boylan, one of Sandy Boylan's four adult sons. Knowing McBride is still practicing, he says, makes the loss "more difficult to swallow."

In addition to negligence in Boylan's death, the board found that McBride had prescribed medicine that naturopaths aren't allowed to use, as well as "dangerously excessive" amounts of acetaminophen with hydrocodone. Bethell and other family members urged the board to revoke McBride's license. Instead, his penalty, handed down by the board on June 16, 2006, was:

  • An $8,250 fine
  • No IV chelation therapy for three years
  • Complete education on chelation therapy
  • No IV treatment for three years
  • No prescribing opiates for one year
  • Continuing education on approved substances
  • Keep prescription pads in triplicate
  • Allow board staff access to his office

Oregon was one of the first states to license naturopaths in 1927. And it allows them more leeway than elsewhere, according to a WW review of state laws. Oregon's 725 licensed naturopaths can prescribe about 300 substances, including opiates, and do minor surgery. Portland also is home to the National College of Naturopathic Medicine.

Boylan's death isn't the only recent fatality from non-invasive treatment. Two Portlanders and a Yakima, Wash., woman treated with an improperly mixed batch of the drug colchicine died this year. And there have been other recent deaths from chelation, which some believe can treat autism and clogged arteries. A 2-year-old girl in Texas treated for lead died in 2005, and a 5-year-old autistic boy died in Pennsylvania the same year.

"The last thing people think is it's going to harm somebody," says Boylan family attorney Stephen Ensor. "It's a big surprise for everyone, including naturopaths, that they have the ability to harm someone in this nature."

 
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 
 

 

 
05.30.2007 at 03:45 Reply
This story gives a misrepresentation of the naturopathic medical profession. Compared to allopathic medicine, the number of iatrogenic (caused by a physician) deaths in the naturopathic field is astoundingly less. The fact that you listed less than 5 cases in this article highlights this. In the conventional medical system, correctly prescribed medication and surgery is the leading cause of death in the US (greater than 700,000 annual deaths). Given the fact that only a few deaths in Oregon have been caused by Naturopathic Physicians in the last 80 years seems remarkable in comparison with the allopathic field. Instead of sensationalizing a very rare and unfortunate incident you should provide fare representaion of this usually non-invasive and gentle medicine. Additionally, an article on the astoundingly high iatrogenic death rate of conventional medicine should be publicized for reference.

 

05.30.2007 at 05:33 Reply
Its unfortunate that deaths occur from medical mistakes and according to the Nutrition Institute of America, 199,000 people die annually from outpatient adverse drug reactions the USA and an additional 98,000 from medical error. Many of these deaths are not as simple as stated in news articles and have followed standard of care. Naturopathic physicians only account for a couple of these deaths per year and do an incredible job at being outpatient doctors; considering their track record of only one Oregon death since 1927. Many of the non-invasive treatments stated in the article are administered by MD's and DO's and should be viewed as treatment options and not only “naturopathic treatments”. Many of these treatments have also helped thousands and unfortunately we only hear of the occasional adverse reaction. Patients are always given risks and alternatives to a procedure and have the right to choose treatment; decisions for treatment are discussed and made between patient and physician and agian, its unfortunate when adverse reactions occur.

 

05.30.2007 at 07:31 Reply
Frankly, I am a little surprised that WW is displaying all the adverse press to this group of practitioners. It seems that WW is singling out a doctor when thousands die each year at the hands of medical care and naturopaths are among the few that generally help and not harm. This doctor has most likely helped many patients by prescribing medication and now one adverse reaction everyone wants to hang him out to dry; complications can happen with every treatment, even standard of care. If you talk to a person in chronic pain or who has a chronic problem you will hear what it is like to be passed around the insurance and medical system. Thank God for practitioners who are willing to treat the difficult and chronic problems. Condolences to the family, I have also lost loved ones to missed diagnosis, however, in my circumstance, it was an MD not an ND.

 

05.31.2007 at 03:39 Reply
"Citing state confidentiality laws" are a very serious set of laws that should be done away with immediately. Let the sun shine in on these Killers and Quacks. Keeping the citizenry informed is not only the job of media but of elected officials. Maybe WWW should look at the amount of campaign money these interest parties give.

 

05.31.2007 at 05:15 Reply
Although naturopaths (quackerpaths)kill less people, they also do not treat severe illnesses as REAL DOCTORS do. Also, the percentage of people (uninformed suckers)that seek out naturopaths is quite small. Many naturopaths dispense "remedies" that are harmlass and inert. Actually sugar pills with Latin names. They also frequently employ worthless diagnostic machines that are nothing but boxes with flashing lights. Chelation has always been a major quackery as has Candida diagnoses, and any of the heavy metal tests that quackerpaths perform. Shame on these crooks and shame on the gullable, stupid customers. Many customers are conspiracy-minded fools that do not truse REAL medicine. I always admired non-conformists, but the naturapathic industry is so huge and has such a massive lobby, that people that patronize this nonsense are actually part od an establishment that rivals the real thing.

 

 
 

Web Design for magazines

Close
Close
Close