Daily Mail

URGENT CHECKS ON 3,000 FOREIGN DOCTORS

After woman with fake degree was allowed to work in NHS for 22 years...

- By Liz Hull and Chris Brooke

THE background­s of 3,000 foreign doctors are being urgently checked after a conwoman with no qualificat­ions was allowed to work as an NHS psychiatri­st for 22 years.

Zholia Alemi, 56, claimed to have a degree from the University of Auckland in New Zealand when she came to work in the UK in 1992. In reality, the convicted fraudster had flunked her first year and dropped out.

But nobody at the General Medical Council, the watchdog responsibl­e for vetting the background of medics, checked whether

her documentat­ion was genuine. At that time, doctors from certain Commonweal­th countries could be cleared to start work simply by presenting their qualificat­ions, without sitting any assessment­s.

It meant that, for more than two decades from 1995, Alemi was free to treat thousands of mental health patients in the NHS, apparently prescribin­g medicine, making assessment­s and even sectioning some of the most vulnerable in society.

The deception by Alemi, thought to be of Iranian extraction, was only discovered after she was convicted of trying to fake the will of an elderly woman to steal her £1.3 million fortune. A judge described her as ‘despicable’ and jailed her for five years last month.

The Daily Mail learned about the GMC’s review after being alerted by an investigat­ion into Alemi’s background by Carlisle’s News and Star newspaper.

The fraudster, who could have earned up to £100,000 a year working as an NHS psychiatri­st, enjoyed the trappings of wealth – buying bottles of expensive champagne as investment­s and driving a red Lotus Elise sports car.

It is understood that when she came here, Alemi showed officials a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery certificat­e. In reality, her only qualificat­ion was a degree in human biology.

Last night patients’ groups called for a public inquiry as police confirmed their investigat­ion into Alemi was ongoing. John Woodcock, independen­t MP for Barrow and Furness, in the Lake District, where Alemi was most recently working, said the case was ‘hugely alarming’.

‘If this had been one individual that had slipped through the net it would have been concerning, but the idea that it could be a systemic loophole that has been exploited is hugely alarming,’ he said. ‘It is understand­able that patients are calling for an inquiry – this is of sufficient magnitude that that may well be necessary.’

The GMC admitted its checks had been inadequate and confirmed an ‘urgent investigat­ion’ was looking into the background­s of 3,000 doctors who came to work from Commonweal­th countries, before 2003, in the same way.

Incredibly, Alemi had been investigat­ed and given an official warning by the Medical Practition­ers Tribunal Service in 2012 after failing to disclose a conviction for careless driving.

She also sectioned psychiatri­c patients for treatment without the authority to do so, and was banned from working for 12 months as a consequenc­e. Despite this, no one thought to examine her background or the reliabilit­y of her qualificat­ions.

One woman, who claimed one of her relatives had been poorly treated by the fake psychiatri­st, wrote on Facebook: ‘The way she (Alemi) treated my relative was appalling and now that I find she was not a qualified psychiatri­st, and was allowed to treat patients for 22 years, I am beyond livid.’

Joyce Robins, of Patient Concern, said it seemed ‘incredible’ that someone could slip through the net in such a fashion. She added: ‘There definitely needs to be a public inquiry – how many patients will she have come into contact with? Patients will be horrified that the proper checks weren’t in place.’

GMC chief executive Charlie Massey said the doctors being checked represente­d just 1 per cent of the 300,000 foreign medics on the register and that vetting was much more rigorous today than it was in the 1990s.

But he admitted: ‘It is extremely concerning that a person used a fraudulent qualificat­ion to join the register.’ Last night, the GMC could not say exactly where Alemi had worked during her career, although she is understood to have had links to West Yorkshire, Lancashire and Scotland.

She was working as a locum old-age psychiatri­st at Cumbria Partnershi­p NHS Foundation Trust in 2016 when she met 84-year-old Gillian Belham.

Alemi befriended Mrs Belham, but when she was accused of stealing watches from the pensioner, police discovered she had been working to take control of her finances – even deceiving some of her friends into being signatorie­s on a new will. The Cumbria trust said it had launched a review.

The Department of Health said: ‘We expect the GMC to investigat­e how this criminal was able to register as a doctor and put measures in place to make sure it can’t happen again.’

‘Patients will be horrified’

 ??  ?? Jailed for five years: Fraudster Zholia Alemi
Jailed for five years: Fraudster Zholia Alemi

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