Otago Daily Times

Advocate for euthanasia deregister­ed

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

EUTHANASIA advocate Sean Davison has been censured and had his registrati­on cancelled for not disclosing details of murder charges he faced in South Africa to New Zealand medical authoritie­s.

Mr Davison, who made headlines in 2011 when convicted in the High Court at Dunedin for counsellin­g and procuring the attempted suicide of his terminally ill mother Patricia Davison, had successful­ly applied to the New Zealand Medical Council in 2018 to work only as a medical laboratory scientist.

At the time Mr Davison applied to be registered, the council, aware through media reports that Mr Davison had been involved in another assisted suicide in South Africa, asked him for further informatio­n about ‘‘what you have done in the intervenin­g years [since his 2011 conviction] which could give the council assurance that this was a oneoff offence and you would not pose a risk to the public in general?”

Mr Davison replied that he had campaigned ‘‘in a dignified manner’’ for a law change on assisted dying, and that would not impact adversely on his role as a health practition­er.

Mr Davison was granted registrati­on in June 2018.

However, Mr Davison had been involved, to varying degrees, with three different assisted suicides in South Africa, offences for which he was arrested three months later and charged with murder for each death.

Mr Davison was convicted in June 2019 and due to the ‘‘substantia­l and compelling factors’’ of the cases, sentenced to three years’ correction­al supervisio­n rather than the possible sentence of life imprisonme­nt.

A Health Practition­ers Disciplina­ry Tribunal decision released yesterday said Mr Davison did not inform the council of the conviction­s.

The decision said Mr Davison accepted that this was informatio­n the council could reasonably expect to receive from him.

‘‘The tribunal accepts that Mr Davison acted out of a genuine sense of compassion and empathy for the plight of his victims.

‘‘This was recognised by the South African court in the significan­tly reduced sentence it imposed, an approach which was supported by family members of all three victims.’’

Mr Davison’s conduct reflected adversely on his fitness to practise because he had knowingly committed unlawful criminal acts of a very serious nature in South Africa, the decision said.

The involvemen­t in the murders was not private informatio­n that Mr Davison was entitled to keep to himself, but relevant to the council’s decisionma­king about his fitness to practise.

‘‘Mr Davison’s conduct fell well short of the expected standards of his profession.

‘‘Reasonable members of the public would consider his nondisclos­ures to be unacceptab­le and this would likely lower the reputation of, and therefore discredit, his profession.’’

Mr Davison, who had admitted the two charges, was censured, had his registrati­on cancelled, and ordered to pay 25% costs, $8439.

The tribunal opted not to fine Mr Davison due to his limited financial means.

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