Colorado Board of Medicine-Attorneys, Lawyers and Legal Counsel

Licensing BoardColorado Medical Board
Address, Physical1560 Broadway, Suite 1350, Denver, CO 80202
Address, Mail1560 Broadway, Suite 1350, Denver, CO 80202
Telephone No.(303) 894-7692
Fax No.
Websitehttps://dpo.colorado.gov/Medical

Investigating Agency for Medical Board

AgencyDepartment of Regulatory Agencies Division of
Professions and Occupations
Address, Physical1560 Broadway, Suite 1350, Denver, CO 80202
Address, Mail1560 Broadway, Suite 1350, Denver, CO 80202
Telephone No.(303) 894-7599
Fax No.(303) 894-5940
Websitehttps://www.colorado.gov/pacific/dora/DPO_Enforcement

The Colorado Medical Board regulates the licensure to practice medicine in the state of Colorado. This includes medical doctors (M.D.), doctors of osteopathy (D.O.), and physician assistants (P.A.). All complaints, investigations and legal negotiations for this board are usually handled by investigators, attorneys and staff members of the Division of Professions and Occupations located at the address above or a field office.

Our attorneys routinely represent professionals in the medicinal fields. This includes full advice and assistance during the investigation, including obtaining and filing statements and other evidence that may be necessary, hearing preparation and hearing representation as further discussed below.

Remember these important points before hiring anyone for representation on a Colorado Board of Medicine complaint:

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Do not hire an attorney who cannot or will not represent you at a hearing. This is only incomplete, partial representation.
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Often individuals who hold themselves out to be professionals with expertise in these matters will advertise that they can assist you in complaints and investigations. But if the case becomes complicated or a hearing is required, they rapidly abandon you. Don’t get caught in such a fix.

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Be reluctant to submit a written statement signed by yourself during the initial investigation until reviewed and approved by an experienced health attorney. Such statements can and will be used against you to prove the case against you, if you have a later hearing. In some states, you cannot be required to make such statements for the investigation; the Fifth Amendment protects you in such a situation. However, in other states you may be required to provide a response that addresses the charges in the complaint and “cooperate” with the investigation. Some states may allow your attorney to make this response on your behalf; if so, this is to be preferred. Be sure you obtain accurate advice on what you must do.

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Be cautious about selecting an informal hearing instead of a formal hearing. If you select an informal hearing, this means you are not contesting the charges against you, you are admitting them (or admitting you are guilty), and the hearing will only allow you to address the amount of punishment you receive.

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If you are not guilty, desire to have the state prove the case against you if it has evidence to do so, and will be allowed to defend yourself, you should select a formal hearing.

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Be very careful about accepting a Settlement Agreement (“SA”), Consent Order (“CO”), or Stipulated Consent Order (“SCO”), as it means you are pleading guilty and will have discipline on your license for the rest of your life.

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If you have malpractice insurance, it probably contains professional license defense coverage that will pay for your legal defense expenses in the case. Don’t waste a valuable benefit you have paid for. Retain an attorney who accepts your insurance at the very first notice of a complaint.

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If you are going before the Board of Medicine because of a complaint, you are almost always either doing it as an informal hearing (in which you have admitted the charges) or as part of a Settlement Agreement/Consent Order in which you have agreed to accept discipline on your license. In the event of a formal hearing before the board, you should have legal representation. In either case, you are going to have discipline on your license for the rest of your life. Make sure you know for sure what the procedures are in this state so that you do not inadvertently give up your rights.

Our attorneys are licensed only in Colorado, Florida, Louisiana, Virginia, and District of Columbia, but we are authorized to represent you in these matters in many of the other states listed above under the state’s multi-jurisdictional practice rules for attorneys; we may apply for special admission privileges under the state’s pro hac vice rules or have to take other such actions to represent you, but we routinely do this.

In addition to board of medicine representation, our attorneys also represent physicians and other health professionals in appeals of administrative cases, contracts, business litigation, Medicare and Medicaid audits and investigations, DEA audits, DEA Order to Show Cause (OTSC) hearings, Inspector General actions, subpoenas for medical records, National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB) appeals, board certification disputes, and most other legal matters.

To contact an attorney with The Health Law Firm for a consultation or representation, click here.

The provision of this information does not constitute the practice of law in this state/jurisdiction nor the advertisement of the practice of law in this state/jurisdiction. This is not the provision of legal advice. Legal advice must be specific to the facts of each individual case. Hiring an attorney is an important decision that should not be made based on advertising alone. Ask for additional information on the qualifications of any attorney before hiring them. Our attorneys only practice in those states and jurisdictions in which they are licensed to practice law or legally permitted to practice law. An attorney-client relationship can only be formed with our attorneys through the payment of a retainer fee and a retainer agreement signed by all parties.

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