The Press

GP accused of misconduct

- Kristie Boland

A Canterbury doctor is accused of profession­al misconduct after she allegedly imported and prescribed unapproved medicines to 29 patients and gave “inaccurate” and “misleading” advice about Covid-19.

The GP, who has interim name suppressio­n, is before the Health Practition­ers Disciplina­ry Tribunal, where she faces a charge of profession­al misconduct laid by the New Zealand Medical Council’s Profession­al Conduct Committee (PCC).

The council’s role is to protect and promote public health and safety.

The alleged “inaccurate” and “misleading” comments relate to when the GP spoke at a Freedom and Rights rally in 2021 and when she made a verbal submission to a council about vaccinatio­n passes.

The PCC alleges the GP “downplayed the seriousnes­s of Covid-19”, claimed the Pfizer vaccine was “genetic therapy”, alleged there was “a lot of censorship going on”, and gave “inaccurate” and “misleading” statistics.

The GP had advocated for Ivermectin as a treatment option for Covid-19, despite knowing it was inconsiste­nt with recommenda­tions at the time from safety authority Medsafe and the Royal New Zealand College of General Practition­ers, the PCC alleges.

Ivermectin is a prescripti­on medicine approved for a limited number of conditions in New Zealand, including an intestinal disease caused by roundworm (strongyloi­diasis), certain parasites in blood or tissue, and for scabies after prior treatment has failed. It is also used to treat parasites in livestock.

Internatio­nally it has been touted as a Covid-19 treatment or cure, but there is little evidence to support those claims. It is dangerous in high doses, and Medsafe has published a warning about its use for Covid.

Between June 2021 and October 2021, it is alleged the Canterbury GP prescribed Ivermectin 34 times to 29 patients for treatment of Covid. In doing so, she did not comply with recommenda­tions about the medicine at the time and failed to make adequate medical records of 31 of her consultati­ons, the PCC said. This meant there was no record of any discussion she had with some of her patients about the medicine’s safety for treating Covid.

The GP marked the clinical records as “confidenti­al”. Some patients were registered as casual patients, meaning the notes could not be viewed by other doctors at the medical centre she worked at, the PCC said.

In September 2021, the GP tried to import 2000 Ivermectin tablets (12mg each) when she knew or ought to have known it was not intended for a particular patient and that trying to import that quantity had potential safety risks, the PCC alleged.

It also alleged she prescribed the medicine to people who were not under her care and did not make any record of her discussion­s with them about the prescripti­on and its use.

The hearing will continue for a week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand