Mercury (Hobart)

Doc’s suspension extended

Probe pending after ‘misogynist­ic and racist’ online comments

- JESSICA HOWARD

A MEDICAL practition­er who was suspended after making a series of “inflammato­ry, misogynist­ic and racist” online posts while working at the Royal Hobart Hospital has had his suspension extended pending further investigat­ion.

The Medical Board of Australia yesterday announced it had suspended the registrati­on of Dr Christophe­r Kwan Chen Lee, effective from Thursday.

“The Board has taken this action in the public interest to maintain confidence in the medical profession,” the press release said.

Dr Lee, 31, was taken to the Tasmanian Health Practition­ers Tribunal by the Medical Board and was found guilty of profession­al misconduct at a hearing in Hobart earlier this year.

Tribunal chairman Robert Webster said Dr Lee made inappropri­ate statements on internet forums and chat sites in December 2016 while he was working as an emergency medicine registrar at the Royal.

He was employed at the hospital from February 2016 to February 2018. He is now based in Victoria. On Singaporea­n online forum Hardware Zone, Dr Lee posted a series of remarks in the context of a situation in Singapore/Malaysia where a local female college student had made disparagin­g remarks about servicemen.

His posts included: “THIS kind will never learn. She needs to be abandoned in India and repeatedly raped in order for her to wake up her idea.” “SOME women deserve to be raped, and that supercilio­us little bitch fits the bill in every way.” “I WILL not conform to your ridiculous moral standards and your expectatio­ns of what a doctor should or should not say.” “I AM a medical practition­er. I also have a foul mouth and call a spade a spade.”

Chairman Webster said Dr Lee had understood his posts could be seen as “inflammato­ry, misogynist­ic or racist in tone”.

Dr Lee was suspended for six weeks and ordered to complete a program on ethical behaviour and communicat­ions, particular­ly in the use of social media.

Dr Lee’s suspension was due to end on Tuesday, but it will now be ongoing while the Medical Board conducts an investigat­ion.

“The Board will not be making any further comment in relation to Dr Lee at this time,” the release said. The Medical Board does not have the legal power to deregister a practition­er.

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