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Dr. Ran Ben-Dom, who still practices in the region, was found guilty of professional misconduct by the Health Professionals Disciplinary Tribunal (HPDT) in November last year, but can only be appointed now due to an appeal.
The ruling related to complaints filed between 2011 and 2017 regarding several women who said he suggested and performed breast exams even though they were there for unrelated health consultations.
Included in the case was the fact that the doctor did not record several breast examinations, asked a woman if she knew she was very attractive, and commented “for her age, they are [breasts] quite complete “or words along those lines.
At the time, eight women discussed the behavior, which continued despite the doctor’s promise to his supervisors that he would “completely avoid” raising the topic of breast cancer prevention.
The doctor had appealed both the Court’s decision and the penalties, and was allowed to continue working on Lower North Island under his name in secret due to the appeal.
Those penalties include a $ 5,000 fine, the need for a chaperone during future breast exams at your expense, as well as the $ 160,000 in costs you were ordered to pay.
Judge Robert Dobson confirmed the Court’s decision and dismissed the appeal of the doctor’s name suppression.
Donald Stevens, the doctor’s attorney, had argued that the permanent deletion should be granted because one of the man’s relatives was studying medicine and removing it would seriously affect the person’s reputation.
But Dobson said he did not find the reasons presented by the defense for a suppression order convincing.
“I believe that he has exaggerated the risk of material adverse consequences for his adult children in terms of his career prospects, and similarly with respect to his wife’s career.”
All but two small details of the appeal were dismissed, but Dobson said these could not affect the “correctness” of the rest of the Court’s findings and the penalties imposed.