The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

No sanction on GP who faked appointmen­ts

Misconduct ruling finds GP’s fitness to practise impaired by his actions

- Graham brown gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

A leading Angus GP who fiddled hundreds of appointmen­ts has avoided sanction after a medical tribunal panel highlighte­d his “propensity for overwork” in a misconduct ruling.

Dr Andrew Thomson was warned that the “exceptiona­l course” adopted in his case by the panel at the Manchester medical practition­ers’ tribunal did not reduce the seriousnes­s of his conduct when he was a senior figure at a Forfar practice.

But they said powerful mitigating factors and witness evidence that he was an “outstandin­g, dedicated and conscienti­ous GP” had led them to take the unusual step in the face of a finding that his fitness to practise had been impaired by his actions.

The tribunal resulted from a General Medical Council investigat­ion which arose from concerns raised in 2014 when Dr Thomson was the executive partner at Forfar’s Academy Street Medical Centre.

Dr Thomson deleted the appointmen­t slots in what the tribunal heard was a “coping mechanism” to deal with the burden of additional work he had taken on.

His admissions during the investigat­ion included creating one appointmen­t in the name of “M Mouse”, but the tribunal accepted his explanatio­n that it was an IT-training inspired fictitious moniker and would have been obvious that it was not a real patient.

The GMC had called for Dr Thomson to be suspended, saying it believed public confidence would be undermined if any lesser sanction was imposed.

However, the tribunal panel said it was satisfied that a finding of impairment alone was sufficient to maintain public confidence in the profession.

Tribunal panel chairman Robin Ince said testimonia­ls provided to the hearing were “consistent­ly positive”.

“The tribunal acknowledg­es that you still have a propensity to overwork.

“However, it is reassured that you have gained sufficient insight to utilise the support mechanisms which are available to you and that you have the insight to discuss any problems in dealing with your workload. The tribunal wishes to emphasise that the exceptiona­l course adopted in your case in no way qualifies or reduces the serious view it holds of your misconduct.

“The determinat­ion that your fitness to practise is impaired is in itself significan­t and sends a message to the profession, to the public and to any future employer of the gravity with which your misconduct is viewed.”

Dr Thomson and Brechin Health Centre, where he now works, made no comment on the tribunal findings.

 ?? Picture: John Stevenson. ?? Dr Andrew Thomson filled time slots with the names of fictitious patients at Forfar’s Academy Street Medical Centre.
Picture: John Stevenson. Dr Andrew Thomson filled time slots with the names of fictitious patients at Forfar’s Academy Street Medical Centre.

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