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D.C. Wins $6.3 Million from Missouri Chiropractic Board
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KansasCity.com REPORTS HERE that "a former Independence chiropractor has won a $6.3 million judgment in his case against former members of the Missouri State Board of Chiropractic Examiners for suspending his license."

The case, which started 20 years ago, stems from accusations that the chiropractor had convinced a Mennonite farmer with AIDS that he was cured and could start a family. A member of a Mennonite sect from north-central Missouri, the patient had hemophilia and contracted the AIDS virus from tainted blood products. He died in 1992 leaving behind a wife and daughter with HIV infections.

At dispute in the case was whether the chiropractor told the patient  that the treatments cured him of AIDS. The doctor has insisted that he made no such claim. The patient’s wife and mother-in-law have contended otherwise. The chiropractor  always has denied that he ever said the patient had overcome HIV.

In 2002 the chiropractor won his appeal of his suspension because a court said he had not been given access to key pieces of evidence. The chirorpactor argued that testimony in a related case would vary from the widow’s testimony in his case. The chiropractic board seemed to overlook a religious anointing ceremony at the patient’s church held in hopes of curing him and urging made by the minister at his wedding that the patient could start a family. The chiropractor suggested those factors might have led the couple to believe the patient was cured or to conceive a child even if he remained HIV-positive.

"The chiropractic board suspended his license for two years — although that suspension was set aside pending appeals that Edwards ultimately won in 2002. The board could have tried again to impose its penalties, but it never did, and Edwards’ departure from the state would have made disciplinary action moot," the article reports

"But [the chiropractor] filed suit against the former board members in 2005 to collect legal fees and losses to his business. That case went to trial last week. In a 9-3 verdict, the Cole County jury awarded damages of $6,284,759."

"The jury’s verdict came against six former members of the chiropractor board.... Ordinarily, members of such boards are immune from civil suits for their official duties. But there is an exception when a court finds they acted with gross negligence. Still, the state’s legal expense fund will ultimately cover any damages."
 
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U.S. government overpaid private insurance companies administering Medicare Advantage plans by as much as $3.1 billion in 2010, according to a new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

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