Kentish Express Ashford & District

Banned doctor was caught working at William Harvey

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- By Paul Hooper

The William Harvey Hospital hired a banned doctor to work in its cardiology department, we can reveal.

Levon Mkhitarian – who had been struck off by the General Medical Council – stole the name of a real Thanet doctor to land posts in Kent and other parts of the UK.

Now the 36-year-old Georgia-born doctor – who never completed the formal training to practise in the UK – has pleaded guilty to 22 offences of deception, fraud and visa offences.

He was caught out in April last year when an applicatio­n for a pass triggered the fact that he was using the name of a real doctor.

Mkhitarian was confronted at the William Harvey Hospital but pretended to be someone visiting his father on one of the wards.

Of f i c i a l s i mmediately checked the ward and realised no such patient existed and he was stopped before fleeing.

Police and NHS officials then discovered he had been working as a senior house officer and as a GP in the Ashford hospital’s cardiology department.

Mkhitarian appeared at Canterbury Crown Court on Monday and admitted that between August 2013 and April 2014 he failed to declare he was no longer entitled to practise as a doctor in the UK.

Mkhitarian, who has an address in south-east London, posed as the genuine GP to get work at the RMR Recruitmen­t agency, which provides staff to hospitals.

Since arriving in the UK, police believe he completed some training but lied about being registered with the General Medical Council in 2010 – when he only had provisiona­l status.

He did the same with other recruitmen­t agencies RM Medics, IMS Recruitmen­t, Interact Ltd, RIG Ltd and Unite Ltd.

But we can reveal that Mkhitarian was struck off by the GMC last year after accepting roles for which he was not qualified all over the country, including Taunton, Crewe, Oxford and Harrow where he worked as a locum house officer in surgery and medi medicine and urology.

He also landed posts at the MacMillan Cancer Centre as a resident medical officer, St Helens and Knowlsley NHS trust as a surgical fellow and The London Clinic as a night resident medical officer for its cancer centre.

Last year a GMC committee ruled he had shown “a reckless disregard for the principles of good medical practice”, was dishonest and had “put his own interests before those of patients”.

They ruled his name should be “erased” from the Medical Register because of his “persistent dishonesty over several years” including faking emails to get work and lying to the GMC about his income.

It was following the ruling that he stole the identity of the GP and began working in Kent.

The judge, who will sentence Mkhitarian next month, will also hear how he created a fictitious CV in the name of the GP, faked an HSBC bank statement, EDF energy bill and created a letter purporting to be from a GP’s surgery.

He also fabricated DBS certificat­es – Disclosure and Barring Services – which are needed to be used in hospitals, and forged references from two North Middlesex Hospital doctors and a General Medical Council certificat­e.

Police also discovered he had faked a National Insurance Card and a fake degree from the University of Vienna.

Mkhitarian is believed to have lived in the USA before coming to the UK as a student eight years ago and completing some of his formal training as a doctor, but was never in a position to be registered fully with the GMC and therefore able to carry out medical roles.

He was remanded in custody and will be sentenced on Friday, July 3.

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