Hello everyone
MJ xmas will be nice for evryone to send there wishes to MJ..L.O.V.E Xx
Murray is working... The Texas Medical Board it seems have a habbit of sweeping certain things under the carpet... Stemming back to the Bush Admin..
People need to write to the TMB..Lobby them
this is a suggested letter to be sent to the Houston Medical Board. It is best- that each of you write your own personal letter. Sending a uniformed letter - will lessen the impact to the Medical Board. We do not want them to ignore these letters!
Sample:
I am writing this letter to request an inquiry into Dr. Conrad Robert Murray’s continued ability to treat patients and administer drugs to patients in the Houston, area.
Dr. Murray represents a dangerous public health threat to the citizens of Texas, and the other states, he is still permitted to provide medical services in.
The reason for this request are as follows:
Dr. Murray did not use ethical nor sound medical judgement in the treatment of singer, Michael Jackson.
Dr.Murray administered Propofol in a residential home setting without the aid of appropriate medical equipment to monitor his patient, Michael Jackson.
Dr.Murray administered Propofol outside of a hospital or medical facility , goes against approved medical standards.
Dr. Murray performed CPR on a bed, contrary to medical guidelines on how to perform effective CPR.
Dr. Murray , left the room and did not properly monitor , his treatment of Michael Jackson.
Murray made the first of three calls spanning 47 minutes on his personal cell phone, which last until 12:05 p.m.; he did not mention these calls to interviewing detectives, who uncovered them through a search of his phone records.
Dr. Murray did not use sound judgment and wasted precious time in calling for 9-1-1 assistance.
-According to Conrad Murray, Michael Jackson had stopped breathing at approximately 11:00 a.m., yet the 911 call was not placed until 12:20 p.m. Within that time span of 1 hour and 20 minutes, Conrad Murray had made three phone calls that totaled approximately 47 minutes. During that time, however, none of those phone calls were to 911. No one has yet to answer why 911 had not been called for 1 hour and 20 minutes after Michael Jackson stopped breathing.
Dr.Murray inflicted unnecessary trauma , to a minor child, Prince Michael Jackson, by requesting the child witness the unsuccessful treatment of his father.
Dr.Murray did not adhere to the advice of the EMT professional, when they arrived at Michael Jackson’s home
Dr.Murray didn’t tell the paramedics about the drugs - he had administered to Michael Jackson.
Michael was no longer hooked up to an IV and there were no drugs in sight.
He said MJ suffered from Cardiac Arrest and thats what the paramedics treated for with the life saving measures.
He pulled rank and made the paramedics work on MJ for 82 minutes AFTER Michael was dead.
Dr. Murray went to the hospital with the ambulance but did not stick around or tell the emerg staff what drugs he had administered to Michael.
Murray was unreachable for 3 days after Michael’s death.
At no time did Dr.Murray tell anyone what drugs he had given to Michael- that was not discovered for many days later when Murray finally spoke with the police and the rest of the details were found in the autopsy.
Dr.Murray refuses to sign Michael Jackson’s death certificate .
It has been determined that Michael Jackson, died on June 25, 2009, from a drug overdose, the mixture of several powerful sedatives. The drugs were provided to Jackson by his personal physician, Conrad Murray.
TEXAS LICENCE
Lic/Permit# M0502
DEGREE: MD
TYPE: Physician
Specialities: Cardiovascular Diseases, Internal Medicine
Practice Address: Acres Home
Heart & Vascular Inst.
6826 West Montgomery
Houston, TX 77091
If you would like to complain about Dr. Murray being back to work:
complain to the Texas Medical Board- Customer Service Phone: (512) 305-7030
(800) 248-4062 (Texas only)
You can also go online and use complaint form on their website(it's very easy to fill).The web address for Texas Medical Board is:
www.tmb.state.tx.us
Place a Complaint
The Texas Medical Board provides investigative and enforcement support to the Medical Board (M.D.'s and D.O.'s), Physician Assistant Board (P.A.'s) and Acupuncture Board (L. A.C.'s).
How To Place a Complaint Against a Licensee
Does your health care practitioner give you enough understandable information? Do you feel that your time with him or her is too brief or hurried? Is the staff abrupt? While these are valid concerns, they do not necessarily mean you are seeing an uncaring or incompetent licensee. Discuss your feelings with your health care practitioner, or send your practitioner a letter expressing your disappointments. Most practitioners want their patients to be satisfied because it improves their patient relationships. And they want the patient's trust because the patient will be more likely to follow medical advice.
If you wish to complain to the Board, please do so in writing. Provide full name and practice address of practitioner. Also, provide dates and details of any incident, being as specific as possible. The Board will acknowledge receipt of your complaint. If your complaint is within the Board's jurisdiction, it will be assigned for proper study. Complainants are advised of an investigation status approximately every 90 days until final action is taken.
Some patients' complaints do not fall within the Board's jurisdiction and should be directed to the local medical or osteopathic society. Complaints against other health care providers (nurses, dentists, pharmacists) or hospitals should be forwarded to the appropriate state licensing authorities. It is very important to understand that the legislature has defined only certain events as violations. While the Board cannot investigate any complaint that is not within its jurisdiction, all complaints received are read and evaluated.
There are several different ways you could place your complaint against a licensee.
Call - Complaint Hotline 1-800-201-9353 and follow the automated prompts to request a complaint form to be sent to you.
E-mail - Submit your complaint electronically via e-mail.
Form - A complaint form may be requested by calling the Complaint Hotline at 1-800-201-9353, by printing the web version, the PDF version, the MS Word version or by submitting the form electronically via e-mail. Although it is not necessary to use our form to make a written complaint, we encourage you to.
Mail - Send your complaint in writing to:
Texas Medical Board
Investigations Department, MC-263
P.O. Box 2018
Austin, TX 78768-2018