N.M. Stat. Ann. § 30-47-4
History: Laws 1990, ch. 55, § 4.
Complaint stated sufficient facts to support a conviction. — Where the state’s complaint alleged that defendant was the attending physician of the decedent who had had a heart attack; the decedent had been receiving the anticoagulant drug Coumadin before the decedent was transferred to defendant’s care; defendant increased the decedent’s dosage of Coumadin; defendant failed to monitor the effect of the prescribed dosage by daily testing the decedent’s blood, failed to consider and monitor the decedent’s blood pressure medication, failed to act in response to the decedent’s worsening symptoms, failed to order proper care upon discovery of blood in the decedent’s stool, ordered a colonoscopy rather than determine whether the symptom was due to the Coumadin, and ordered the colonoscopy on a non-emergent basis despite the fact that the decedent required drastic and urgent treatment; and the decedent died due to blood loss from the excessively prescribed quantity of Coumadin, the state’s complaint alleged sufficient facts to support a conviction under 30-47-4 NMSA 1978. State v. Muraida, 2014-NMCA-060, cert. denied, 2014-NMCERT-005.