Taupo & Turangi Herald

Ex psychologi­st: Clients who complained ‘fake’

Psychologi­st de-registered in NZ alleges board corruption and refuses hearing attendance

- Belinda Feek Open Justice

Apsycholog­ist who was deregister­ed after continuing to diagnose patients despite failing a competence review says those patients were “fake” and he doesn’t believe a hearing even took place.

Gunther van der Heijden’s competence came under the microscope after a complaint by a fellow psychologi­st to the Psychologi­sts Board of New Zealand in August 2019. A review was carried out, which he failed, and he then refused to work with a board-appointed supervisor.

Van der Heijden is from Belgium and moved to New Zealand in September 2000 and was working in Taupō at the time of the incidents.

Between February and August 2021 there was a series of communicat­ions between van der Heijden, the board, board staff, and other psychologi­sts, in which he dubbed the board a “kangaroo court”.

He sent an unnamed board member multiple emails over several months accusing the board and its delegates’ of “corruption, nepotism, and abuse of power, which could potentiall­y pose a serious risk to their country’s public health and safety”.

As well as being de-registered, the Health Practition­ers Disciplina­ry Tribunal censured Van der Heijden and ordered him to pay costs of $81,879.05 to the PCC and $30,584.67 to the tribunal.

He didn’t attend the June hearing. After NZME ran a story about the tribunal findings last month Van der Heijden reached out saying he wanted to tell his side of the story.

He says he left New Zealand two years ago and reiterated his original claims the board and the country’s health system were “corrupt”.

“Indeed as a human being who has always cared a lot about the welfare of his fellow men, it is my utmost belief that it is my moral and ethical obligation to protect the NZ public against the serious harm that has already been done, and is still being done to the NZ public as a consequenc­e of the corruption within the NZPB in the narrow sense and within the NZ healthcare system in the broader sense.”

He said he didn’t bother attending as he felt he wouldn’t have had a fair hearing.

He also said he had spoken to several healthcare lawyers and psychologi­sts who were unhappy with the NZ Psychologi­sts Board and claimed they ”dared not stand up against them”.

“When you look at what has already happened to me during my battle it is easy to understand why.”

It was from those sources that he claims he first heard the board described as a “kangaroo court”.

He said his “nightmare” began when he was first allocated a supervisor who would later notify the board of her concerns.

“Hereby, [supervisor], seriously violated the supervisio­n contract as ... it’s supposed to be confidenti­al where you can freely and safely discuss any weaknesses you would have in your practice,” he said.

“Your supervisor is supposed to be somebody who you can trust, certainly not somebody who would put in a notificati­on against you.”

As for the four clients - who paid him more than $2000 in fees - he saw at his Taupō home office or through Skype to assess their ADHD diagnoses, van der Heijden believed most of them were fake.

“At least three of the four were fake. The fourth I am not sure about, but probably he/she was. Earlier they also sent another fake client to me to put in a complaint against me,” he claims.

He believed one of them paid him around $2000 for an assessment.

Van der Heijden said several “health lawyers and psychologi­sts” told him he didn’t need to be a registered psychologi­st to do the work he was doing at the time, “as long as I did not call myself a clinical psychologi­st I would be fine”.

“Hence I decided to call myself a neurodevel­opmental assessor and informed the board of this ... and asked [the board] to deregister me.”

He was also dubious whether the hearing even happened as he had been trying to get a transcript but was denied.

He had since found it his “moral obligation” to notify psychologi­sts boards in many countries including Australia, US, Canada, South Africa, United Kingdom, Netherland­s, Germany, and Belgium, of the NZPB’s “incompeten­ce and corruption”.

Board chief executive Vanessa Williams said while it was not appropriat­e for the board to comment, she was able to confirm the hearing did take place.

Van der Heijden had a statutory right of appeal but, as far as the board knew, he did not exercise that right, she said.

HDPT did not respond to a request for comment.

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 ?? ?? Former Taupō psychologi­st Gunther van der Heijden says he didn't attend the hearing because he "knew I would never get a fair trial".
Former Taupō psychologi­st Gunther van der Heijden says he didn't attend the hearing because he "knew I would never get a fair trial".

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