The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

GP admits doctoring his appointmen­t schedule

Dr Andrew Thomson practised in Forfar at the time of the offences

- Graham brown gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

A senior Tayside doctor who fiddled appointmen­t slots over a five-year period has admitted logging a faked patient named M Mouse.

Dr Andrew Thomson was a GP at Forfar’s Academy Health Centre at the time of the offences which are the subject of a profession­al body hearing now under way in Manchester.

The highly-regarded doctor has admitted altering appointmen­t schedules to create gaps on numerous occasions when he was available for consultati­on.

Dr Thomson, who graduated from Dundee University in 1996, has been called before a Medical Practition­ers Tribunal Service (MPTS) hearing which has been scheduled for 10 days.

He has admitted to the tribunal a string of allegation­s relating to appointmen­t slots being deleted, falsely claiming he had either seen or spoken to patients and on one occasion making an appointmen­t for a patient he knew was an inpatient at Ninewells Hospital.

Dr Thomson also admitted that on September 16 at 2.59pm he logged a 3.40pm appointmen­t with the front desk system at the practice for a patient in the name of M Mouse, filling a gap in his schedule created shortly before by an administra­tive staff member.

The MPTS hearing has found Dr Thomson’s actions on a number of occasions were either misleading, dishonest or both.

Referring to the matters admitted by Dr Thomson and found proven, tribunal chairman Mr Robin Ince said: “By reason of the matters set out your fitness to practice is impaired because of your misconduct.”

Consequent­ly, the hearing will now move on to a second stage and additional evidence is expected to be presented in the coming days.

The three-person tribunal panel, comprising a legally qualified chairman, a ley member and a medical figure, may then decide to place a warning on the doctor’s registrati­on.

If the tribunal decides Dr Thomson’s fitness to practise is impaired, the case will continue to a third stage to determine whether sanction should be imposed.

Options available to the tribunal range from ending the case with no further action to suspension or removal of a doctor from the medical register.

Dr Thomson, who also serves on the Tayside Local Medical Committee and is a GP at Brechin Health Centre, was not available for comment.

NHS Tayside and Brechin Health Centre said they could make no comment on the matter.

MPTS hearings make independen­t decisions about a doctor’s fitness to practise.

The General Medical Council investigat­es doctors and brings a case against them to the MPTS.

 ?? Picture: John Stevenson. ?? Dr Andrew Thomson has been called before a Medical Practition­ers Tribunal Service hearing.
Picture: John Stevenson. Dr Andrew Thomson has been called before a Medical Practition­ers Tribunal Service hearing.
 ??  ?? Dr Thomson, who is a GP at Brechin Health Centre, was not available for comment.
Dr Thomson, who is a GP at Brechin Health Centre, was not available for comment.

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