A
ROGUE surgeon performed unnecessary, unauthorised - and in some cases
botched surgery - on 152 WA women in a suspected money-making scheme.
In 141 cases, he risked serious complications, including making the women infertile.
In several other cases, the now-banned medico was responsible for horrific blunders.
His
reckless actions carried on unchecked in Perth hospitals for more than
four years before he was stopped and banned. Until today, the scandal
has been cloaked in secrecy because of a court order obtained by the
wealthy surgeon's lawyers.
After a marathon and expensive legal fight, The Sunday Times can finally tell the WA public what happened.
Dr
Naimish Patel patients have told of major surgical errors such as
attaching the uterus to the bowel, slicing arteries, performing vaginal
"resizings" when they were not needed and incorrectly performed internal
procedures.
In
2009, Patel, who has since fled the country, pleaded guilty to
misconduct and gross carelessness before the State Administrative
Tribunal.
One charge related to him performing unnecessary secondary operations without the consent of his patients.
After
delivering babies through caesarean sections, he removed benign
growths, known as fimbrial cysts, from patients' fallopian tubes. These
ranged in size from pinheads to large marbles.
He
did not tell his patients or seek their consent for the added procedure
which netted him extra money despite the heightened risk of infertility
and other serious complications.
A
confidential Health Department briefing paper obtained by The Sunday
Times shows that between October 2001 and January 2006 the surgeon
performed these extra operations on at least 141 patients after he
delivered their babies. Eleven gynaecological procedures were also
identified.
Authorities first discovered irregularities in September 2005, according to the paper.
It
referred to the Patel’s "billing practice" billing hospitals for the
original operations and the removal of the cysts, which reaped him an
extra $384 to $492 a patient.
The "billing practice" significantly increased during 2004 and 2005.
In
May 2006, the Medical Board won an interim order to stop the surgeon
performing the second operations. A month later, it applied to
indefinitely suspend Dr Patel.
A
full briefing on the case was provided to then South Metropolitan Area
Health Service chief executive Peter Flett, then health director Neale
Fong and former health minister Jim McGinty in August 2007. They all
agreed that "open disclosure" should occur to all patients who "may"
have suffered some harm, according to the briefing.
A
month later, authorities began making contact with patients.
Twenty-four cases were deemed serious enough to require senior health
staff to phone patients and tell them to seek immediate medical
attention.
Of
those, six were referred to specialists for further checks. Other
patients were sent letters informing them they had secondary surgery
they did not know about.
Over
the same period, several patients filed complaints with the Medical
Board over botched gynaecological procedures by the same surgeon.
Thirteen proceedings were launched by the Medical Board against Patel, involving nine patients.
The
first case, which was filed in November 2005, involved an incorrectly
performed hysterectomy that left the woman completely numb in her uterus
region.
Another case involved repeated botched gynaecological operations on a 16-year-old.
The surgeon left WA in early 2007.
In
March 2009, he was permanently stripped of his right to work as a
doctor in WA after he was found guilty of "disgraceful or dishonourable"
conduct for lying about the complaints against him while trying to get
work in South Africa.
Almost
all the details of the scandal had been kept secret because a blanket
suppression order was granted after the surgeon's lawyers argued he was
at risk of self-harm if the case became public. Which has later been
dismissed as another lie or attempt to obfuscate the truth.
The
Sunday Times won a partial lifting of the order, allowing it to publish
today's story. The newspaper spent more than $120,000 in its legal
battle.
More victims of the surgeon may now surface.
The WA Health Department issued a statement on Friday about the surgeon.
It
said: "Dr Naimish Patel was regularly billing for secondary medical
procedures while performing obstetric and gynaecological surgery.
Independent reviews found that these procedures were not medically
indicated.
"WA
Health reported Dr Naimish Patel to the WA Medical Board in 2006
following concerns about his practices. Immediate action was taken to
stop him from operating in WA and a clinical review was conducted to
determine the number of women who may have been affected by the
additional secondary procedures. He ceased employment at WA Health in
early 2006.
"WA Health identified 141 obstetric and 11 gynaecological patients who may have been affected by the secondary procedures.
WA Health contacted the women, but was unsuccessful in 13 cases despite all efforts.
"These women have been offered counselling and referral to a medical specialist if necessary," the report said.
"WA Health condemns the actions of this doctor and regrets any harm and distress he has caused patients and their families."
A Medical Board official said: "Ultimately the practitioner was deregistered as a result of the action taken by the board.
"Surgical
procedures generally involved risk to the patient and it is
unacceptable to carry out any surgical procedure unnecessarily.
"It is also unacceptable to carry out a surgical procedure without the patient having given his or her consent."
The original article can be located here.
Article published by IOL in South Africa here.
A
disgraced gynaecologist and obstetrician who applied for a job at
Grey's Hospital in Pietermaritzburg has been barred from ever practising
medicine in Western Australia again.
Just
how close he came to practising in this country is evident from Grey's
Hospital's 2007/08 annual report which stated that Dr N Patel had been
appointed as a "consultant in the department and will join us from
Australia in January, 2008".
The
newspaper said the doctor, who was involved in what could possibly be
the state's biggest medical scandal, was believed to be living in South
Africa with his wife, who was also a doctor.
False declaration
The
paper also reported that the judge found that Dr Patel had made a false
declaration to the Health Professions Council of South Africa, stating
that no proceedings were pending against him in any country.
He
had also provided fake certificates of good standing from the Medical
Board of Western Australia and failed to disclose the actions against
him in a phone interview with a senior officer at Grey's Hospital.