The Evening Leader

Medical board reopens 91 old cases about sexual impropriet­y

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COLUMBUS (AP) — A review of whether Ohio’s medical board properly closed old cases of alleged sexual assault or impropriet­y by medical profession­als has resulted in recommenda­tions to refer 11 cases to law enforcemen­t and reopen 91 more for further investigat­ion.

The subjects of those cases remain secret, at least for now, because the State Medical Board doesn’t disclose who is under investigat­ion unless the cases result in citations or discipline.

The review of more than 1,200 cases from the past 25 years was launched in 2019 after the board learned that evidence of misconduct had been ignored in one case: its 1996 investigat­ion involving the since-deceased Ohio State University team doctor Richard Strauss. He has since been accused of abusing hundreds of young men during the two decades preceding the medical board investigat­ion. Strauss was never discipline­d, and officials say they can't determine now why his case was closed.

The team reviewing the old cases actually had recommende­d that the board reopen more than 200 of them, but acknowledg­ed that doing so would be difficult in more than half of those because of the circumstan­ces or the available informatio­n.

The reviewers also recommende­d additional investigat­ion for 42 cases in which board licensees might have violated their duty to report misconduct by fellow licensees.

One of those involves a former Ohio State student health director accused of knowing but failing to report multiple sexual misconduct complaints about Strauss in the mid-1990s. That former director sought an administra­tive hearing before the medical board decides whether to take action against his license, and the hearing is scheduled for next month.

The number of cases recommende­d for additional investigat­ion was revealed this week in the final report from a state working group that reviewed the board's handling of the Strauss case.

The panel acknowledg­ed that the medical board has changed its policies and procedures in the wake of that review and credited the board for making “real and meaningful strides toward ensuring that never again would it fail to act when it holds credible, actionable informatio­n about one of its licensees, such as it had with Strauss.”

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