Expert Says Anna Nicole Smith was Addicted to Prescription Drugs

Posted on October 27, 2009

An expert witness testified Monday that the late Nicole Smith was addicted to prescription drugs, and that her psychiatrist should have known it.

The Associated Press reports that Dr. Timothy Botello, an expert in psychiatry, said that Smith’s psychiatrist, Dr. Khristine Eroshevich, was excessively prescribing drugs to the former actress and model in amounts that could have been dangerous.

In examining records of the case, Botello said he could find no medical reasons to prescribe the dosages of four different medications being given to Smith simultaneously by Eroshevich toward the end of her life.

"For someone with a drug addiction history, it would be quite dangerous," he said.

When asked if he believed Anna Nicole Smith was an addict, Botello said, "Yes, based in the information I reviewed.”

Smith died at a Florida hotel in February 2007 of an accidental overdose involving at least nine different medications.

Eroshevich, Dr. Sandeep Kapoor, and Smith’s former boyfriend and lawyer Howard K. Stern are charged with conspiring to illegally provide Smith with controlled substances. The allegations include giving drugs to an addict.

All three have pleaded not guilty. They are not charged in the death of Smith.

The preliminary hearing is being held to determine whether there is enough evidence to order them to stand trial.

Botello testified that Smith’s medical records showed she had been treated for addiction at the Betty Ford Center before she met Eroshevich, and that she had been admitted to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in 2006 to withdraw from drugs when she was pregnant.

Botello said he didn’t know if Eroshevich was aware of either hospitalization or if she was conferring with other doctors who had been treating Smith for years for chronic pain.

"Given the history of substance abuse, you would be careful to give the lowest amount" of drugs, he said.

A psychiatrist prescribing medications in the situation should have been part of a pain management team, conferring with other doctors to assure they did not duplicate prescriptions, he said.

Botello said he assumed Eroshevich and Kapoor knew each other. But Kapoor has said he never met Eroshevich while both were treating Smith. Testimony indicated that Eroshevich began her relationship with Smith as a friend and neighbor. Botello said that made it doubly important that she separate the personal and medical relationships while prescribing drugs.

He also suggested that Eroshevich was trying to help Smith recover from the 2006 death of her son, Daniel (who also died of an accidental overdose), when she began prescribing sedatives.

Divider

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.