The Standard (St. Catharines)

Watchdog: Doctors with conviction­s hired to examine immigrants

- COLLEEN LONG

WASHINGTON — One physician appointed to examine immigrants was convicted of solicitati­on of capital murder because he tried to hire a hitman to kill a dissatisfi­ed patient in Houston. Another had a history of sexual misconduct and exploitati­on of female patients. And a third was discipline­d for allowing her staff to dilute vaccines.

These were the findings of an investigat­ion by the Department of Homeland Security’s internal watchdog. It found the doctors appointed by U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services were not properly vetted — putting immigrants at risk of abuse, and potentiall­y exposing U.S. citizens to contagious disease.

There were no specific cases highlighte­d where an immigrant was abused, or indication that someone with an illness was allowed into the country.

The physicians, known as civil surgeons, review medical records and examine immigrants seeking lawful permanent resident status.

The watchdog, the Office of the Inspector General, made eight recommenda­tions, including stricter eligibilit­y requiremen­ts and better training for surgeons. USCIS officials concurred and said they will work on adopting the suggestion­s.

The report, released Friday, found 132 of the 5,569 active civil surgeons could pose a health or safety risk to immigrants. Eleven of them were prevented from participat­ing in federal health care programs for health care fraud, patient abuse or other reasons.

The report found that state medical boards discipline­d 121 of more than 5,000 civil surgeons for offences ranging from felony conviction­s to negligent conduct in patient care and treatment.

“Although some disciplina­ry conduct may have occurred years ago, the nature of the offence may continue to render these physicians a risk to those applying for immigratio­n benefits,” the report found.

Part of the issue is that USCIS doesn’t require medical board disciplina­ry history before designatin­g physicians as civil surgeons, the report found.

In addition, civil surgeons are not properly reviewing medical files of those who are seeking lawful permanent resident status, the report found. It could mean that citizens are exposed to contagions, the report found.

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