Doctor who engaged in 'elaborate fraud' to get work here is struck off register

A doctor who engaged in an “elaborate fraud” in seeking to obtain employment here, including claiming to have worked for a non-existent Dublin hospital and providing false references, has been struck off the medical register.

Doctor who engaged in 'elaborate fraud' to get work here is struck off register

A doctor who engaged in an “elaborate fraud” in seeking to obtain employment here, including claiming to have worked for a non-existent Dublin hospital and providing false references, has been struck off the medical register.

He cannot apply for registration for another ten years, High Court president Mr Justice Peter Kelly also ordered.

The judge said on Monday there was "every reason" for making the orders as Dr Idowu Adeyemi Adeboro had engaged in "breath-taking dishonesty on an elaborate scale".

He had claimed a work history at hospitals which did not exist and had provided bogus references, one from an English doctor who does not exist and another from a US doctor who does exist but who gave evidence he had never met Dr Adeboro, the judge said.

Dr Adeboro had demonstrated no insight into his conduct, he added.

He agreed with the Medical Council the orders sought by it under the Medical Practitioners Act 2007 were proportionate and necessary to ensure public safety and protect the reputation of the profession.

At an earlier court hearing, held in camera, Dr Adeboro was suspended from the register pending further order.

He was registered here in July 2017 but has never worked here and had told the Council he has never been to Ireland.

On Monday, J.P McDowell, solicitor for the Council, told the judge Dr Adeboro, with an address at Apsledene, Gravesend, UK, is a native of Nigeria who holds a Spanish passport and who qualified in medicine in Romania.

Mr McDowell said an investigation was initiated, leading to a hearing before a Fitness to Practice Committee (FTPC), after a recruitment agency made a complaint in April 2018 arising from it having become suspicious about the authenticity of references relating to the doctor and about a work history on his CV when he applied for first registration in May 2017.

The FTPC found various allegations were proven, including that, around March 22nd 2018, the doctor incorporated and/or registered or caused to be incorporated/registered a limited company under the name "Saint Emmanuel Hospital European Medical Center Healthcare Ltd", with a registered addresses at Harcourt Street, Dublin, in order to create and/or support a false employment history as a medical practitioner when there was no such hospital operating from that address.

It was also proven he had submitted, or caused/allowed to be submitted, a cv to Niche Jobs Ltd and/or Cowley Brown Recruitment in which he represented he was a resident medical officer in emergency and/or general medicine at "St Emmanuel Hospital European Medical Centre, Dublin," from August 1 2017 "to present" when that was not true.

It was proven he had represented he was a junior doctor in emergency medicine at "SMHG Hospital Standard Medical Healthcare Group, London, UK", between December 1 2016 and July 30 2017 when that was not true and there was no such UK hospital.

It was further proven the CV represented he was a clinical fellow engaging in an "attachment/observership" at the "Cancer Institute of Florida, Weston, Florida" from September 1 2016 to November 28 2016 when that was not true.

It was also proven he had provided false references purporting to be from consultants at the UK and Florida units.

The FTPC also found proven allegations, when seeking registration here in May 2017, he provided various valid documents purportedly notarised by a firm of notaries in England when he knew, or ought to have known, the firm had not notarised the documents.

Dr Adeboro did not attend the inquiry and was not represented.

The FTPC concluded his conduct amounted to professional misconduct at the most serious end of the spectrum and the "prolonged pattern of dishonesty" was "disturbing and incompatible with being a registered medical practitioner".

The Medical Council concurred and agreed with the Committee Dr Adeboro's registration should be cancelled. The Council further decided he should be prohibited for ten years from applying to register here.

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