The Norwalk Hour

CT med board revokes doctor’s license, fines 4 others

- By Lisa Backus CONN. HEALTH I-TEAM WRITER This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team (c-hit.org), a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting.

The state Medical Examining Board last month revoked the license of a Shelton physician who failed to attend required mental health therapy sessions and fined four physicians for a variety of issues involving patient care.

On Dec. 21, the board revoked the medical license of Dr. Nami Bayan, which had been under suspension since May 1, 2019. Bayan’s license to practice medicine was initially suspended for two years, and he was ordered to participat­e in therapy sessions at least twice a month after he exhibited signs of a mental health issue, a disciplina­ry report said.

In 2018 Bayan, a surgeon who worked at H & B Quality Medical Care in Shelton, had sent repeated emails to the state Department of Public Health (DPH) indicating he believed the police and the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion were investigat­ing the possibilit­y of a terrorist attack based on a report he made, documents said. The board temporaril­y suspended his license in December 2018, saying Bayan “presented a clear and immediate danger to public health and safety.”

DPH investigat­ors learned in 2020 that Bayan had violated the terms of the 2019 discipline by failing to show up for therapy sessions over the course of months, documents said. After a hearing on whether Bayan violated the terms of his discipline, the board voted to revoke his license permanentl­y.

The board also reprimande­d the license of Dr. Michael Imevbore, a pulmonary physician with CT Pulmonary Specialist­s in New Haven, and required him to pay a $5,000 fine after a DPH investigat­ion found that he had failed to check the state’s prescripti­on monitoring and reporting system before writing prescripti­ons for more than 200 patients between July 2018 and May 2020, documents said.

Imevbore also wrote controlled substance prescripti­ons for another 70 patients, but only checked the state’s prescripti­on monitoring program for half of them, from May 2020 to November 2020, investigat­ors concluded. Since December 2020, he has properly used the reporting system, DHP officials said.

Under the consent order approved by the board, Imevbore will be on probation for a year, during which he is required to have 20 percent of his patient files reviewed for his use of the prescripti­on reporting system. The state Department of Consumer Protection Drug Control Division, which runs the prescripti­on monitoring program, will do two random audits of his compliance with the system in the next year, the order said.

The board also fined three other physicians.

Dr. J. James Bruno II, of Urology Associates in Danbury, was fined $1,000 after he failed to meet the standard of care by not reviewing a scan before he performed a cystoscopy on a patient in 2019 to remove a kidney stone. The scan revealed that the kidney stone had been passed prior to the procedure, documents said. The board also reprimande­d Bruno’s license.

Dr. Rania Rifaey, of Avon, was fined $1,000 after injecting numbing medication and other drugs used to treat inflammati­on on the wrong side of a patient suffering from bursitis in October of 2018, documents said. Rifaey’s license was also reprimande­d.

Dr. Murray Wellner was fined $1,000 and his license placed on probation for nine months after an investigat­ion found that he had used illegible handwritin­g to document the files of at least three patients from 2013 to 2020, according to DPH.

During the probationa­ry period, Wellner, a West Hartford physician, will have to undergo a review of 20 percent of his patient files to check for legibility, the consent order said. Wellner had been previously discipline­d by the board in 2011 after an investigat­ion revealed he had inappropri­ately prescribed a drug to treat attention deficit and hyperactiv­ity disorder for eight patients who didn’t need the treatment.

The board also reprimande­d the Connecticu­t license of a physician who was discipline­d by California authoritie­s for diagnosing and treating patients through telehealth without proper assessment and evaluation, documents said.

Dr. Ho Dzung Anh, a physician practicing in California, was discipline­d in California after he prescribed antibiotic­s for two undercover investigat­ors posing as telehealth patients, documents said. Anh holds medical licenses in several states, the DPH said.

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