doug - evergreen park wrote:
Do you think you had a moral obligation to try to get your client help to detox? Just curious...
No I don't have a legal obligation and considering I have no morals I didn't have one of those either.
But seriously, I didn't know about the alcohol use till after he died. I had suspicions, but no idea it was as bad as it was. And I had no control over him getting the meds, he was doing it outside the confines of work comp. I also wasn't aware of just how bad it was till right at the very end when he was in my office and I could see how bad he looked face to face. So, i had some idea about his condition, but not the full scope of it. And then the question comes up, if I did know what could I do about it? He lived alone and was estranged from his family so its not like I could call a family member. And if I mentioned it to him directly I doubt it would've made a difference. Later on I talked to his sister and got a very different story than the one he gave me. Apparently they had had several interventions with him and because of that he stopped talking to them altogether. So its not like he was open to talking about it and changing.
On top of that, if I piss him off there's the very real chance he fires me and hires a new attorney. Happens all the time in work comp. If that happens I lose thousands of dollars so I have to be very careful when discussing matters with clients that they don't want to talk about.
But, every situation is unique. After that happened I had a different client who became addicted to vicodin. In that case, the evidence was pretty clear and it was documented as part of his work comp case. Because of that I was able to talk to him about it without crossing any boundaries and I ended up getting the work comp insurance company to pay for a 30 day stint in rehab. That was another situation where the neuro surgeon wanted him to stop taking drugs, but the pain clinic kept giving him scripts. They got him off the vicodin by prescribing siboxin (sp) which is a great SHORT-TERM drug for getting off opiates, but this pain doctor kept him on it for a year, turning him from a vicodin addict to a siboxin addict.
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LTG wrote:
Trae Young will be a bust. Book It!