National Post

Romance with ex-patient costs psychiatri­st licence

‘Profession­al misconduct’ cited by board

- Paola Loriggio

TORON TO • A Toronto psychiatri­st has lost his licence to practise after becoming romantical­ly i nvolved with a former patient less than a month after their profession­al relationsh­ip ended.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario says Dr. Nagi Ghabbour failed to respond to the woman’s escalating feelings for him while she was his patient and “clearly did not recognize his own part in it.”

The regulatory body says Ghabbour, 55, should have known how to manage the situation but instead chose to “pursue his own romantic needs.”

An agreed statement of facts shows the woman, who was married and had young children, sought treatment from him for anxiety and depression stemming from her work and marital difficulti­es.

The document says the woman announced she no longer wanted to be his patient about a year later amid concerns from her family over her relationsh­ip with — and her own romantic feelings for — the psychiatri­st.

It says they started to date within a few weeks and began a sexual relationsh­ip the following month. They now live together and plan to marry once her divorce is finalized, the document says.

While licence revocation is a more severe penalty than typically imposed for this type of case, Ghabbour’s misconduct was egregious and a lengthy suspension would not address the public’s or the college’s concerns, the disciplina­ry committee wrote in its decision.

“While Dr. Ghabbour’s case is not a case of sexual abuse of a patient, rather, profession­al misconduct in that he started a sexual relationsh­ip too soon after terminatio­n, the very nature of the relationsh­ip, the profound vulnerabil­ity of this specific patient and Dr. Ghabbour’s lack of insight into the egregiousn­ess of the misconduct, led the commit- tee to decide that revocation is the only suitable penalty to fully protect the public,” it said.

Ghabbour can apply for reinstatem­ent in a year, which the committee said should give him an opportunit­y to show that he has learned how to prevent the same issues from arising again.

He also faces a reprimand and has been ordered to pay $ 11,000 to cover the costs of the two-day hearing.

The college’s c urrent guidelines say that when treatment involves significan­t psychother­apy, sexual i nvolvement is l i kely i nappropria­te any time after the end of the patient-doctor relationsh­ip.

The agreed statement of facts says the woman, whose identity is protected by a publicatio­n ban, began to see Ghabbour at the suggestion of her uncle. It says Ghabbour, who worked in the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Program at St. Joseph’s Health Centre in Toronto, agreed to take her on as a patient.

The woman’s mother voiced concerns about their growing c l oseness and threatened to lodge a complaint with the college, the document says. Ghabbour’s notes suggest he was not worried about possible repercussi­ons, it says.

“He testified, and had charted, that he did not feel he had anything to worry about should her family members complain about him as he was doing nothing wrong,” it reads.

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