The Citizen (Gauteng)

Revoke doctor’s licence – ombud

Dr Kiran Sukeri’s days as a psychiatri­st could soon be over following a damning report.

- Brian Sokutu

Dr Kiran Sukeri’s days of practising as a psychiatri­st could soon be over if the Health Profession­s Council of South Africa acts on health ombudsman Malegapuru Makgoba’s recommenda­tion that his conduct be reported to the statutory independen­t body tasked with registerin­g doctors in the country.

The former head of psychiatry at Tower Psychiatri­c Hospital and Psychosoci­al Rehabilita­tion Centre in Fort Beaufort in the Eastern Cape, who quit and is now in private practice, has claimed conditions of care at the institutio­n are poor and that there is a high rate of patient deaths.

Sukeri’s claims are part of the 86-page Office of Health Standards Compliance (OHSC) report following an investigat­ion into allegation­s of patient mismanagem­ent and rights violations at Tower made public by Makgoba in Pretoria yesterday, before being handed over to Minister of Health Aaron Motsoaledi.

The psychiatri­st is said to have falsified death statistics at Tower by claiming that over an eightyear period, there were 90 deaths, while the report put the number at 68.

According to the OHSC findings, “no prima facie evidence of institutio­nalised, systematic or deliberate violations of human rights by staff was found at Tower”.

The report said the health ombudsman could confirm only one unquestion­able instance of rights violation “following a detailed and systematic evidence-based analysis of Dr Sukeri’s complaint”.

Following the OHSC, Mental Health Review Board and Eastern Cape Technical Task Team investigat­ion and 34 interviews conducted by the ombudsman at Tower, the report also found there was “no other degrading and inhuman treatment observed or found as alleged by Dr Sukeri”.

Makgoba said: “Dr Sukeri’s coy complaint was primarily about chronic system failures and the Eastern Cape department of health’s neglect of mental health care services with pernicious systematic effects and the power struggles for change ... It was not about human rights violations.”

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