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Doctor plagued patient with calls requesting date for friend


Doctor was trying to set his 33-year-old patient up to marry his friend
Doctor was trying to set his 33-year-old patient up to marry his friend

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A Sudanese Doctor has appeared before the Irish Medical Council for the second time – after attempting to set a female patient up on a date with his friend.

Dr Eltayeb Elkhabir, 40, attended a hearing into his fitness to practice medicine on Wednesday, the second such time he has been ordered to face the Council.

On this occasion, Dr Elkhabir was accused of telephoning and sending text messages to a female patient in an attempt to set her up with his friend.

He was previously sanctioned in 2008 when he told a patient at St Columcille’s Hospital in Dublin that epilepsy ‘could be seen as a sign of the devil in you and could be caused by sexual activity’.

The Sudan national was ordered to do a course in ethics in 2008 when the Council also heard that he had given his cell phone number to the patient and told her to call him if she wanted to know more about Islam.

The latest enquiry heard that he was ‘over-friendly’ with Sinead Doyle and made her feel uncomfortable when she was admitted to the Hermitage Medical Clinic last May for an MRI scan.

Doyle told the hearing that Dr Elkhabir told her his age and claimed he was from Morocco and also asked about her family and her job, requesting a loan when he learnt she worked in a bank.

When Doyle told him she was 33, he remarked that it was a ‘good age’ and the age that Jesus had died at. He also asked his patient if she was single and seeing anyone.

The doctor had left his job at the Hermitage clinic when he rang Doyle the following month, claiming he was checking up on her and advising her to give up alcohol after tests found her liver enzyme levels were raised.

The physician rang again later that month when he advised Doyle to stay off alcohol forever, then asked her if he could pass her number onto a friend whom he wanted her to meet.

“He was trying to sell me this marriage thing,” Doyle told the enquiry.

Doyle reported the doctor to the Gardai, the hospital and the Medical Council after further calls and text messages.

In his letter of explanation to the Medical Council, Dr Elkhabir wrote: “I’ve tried to help my friend and Ms Doyle to meet as a good couple, as I mentioned this is a very normal step for my religion and in my culture.

“I would be grateful to the people of Ireland and the West to adopt such a nice policy in life as my faith and doctrines support that. If it has not suited Ms Doyle, I am withdrawing this initiative and I’m sure it will be suitable to a lot of other people.”

A father of three who has been working in Ireland since 2001, Dr Elkhabir said his initial conversation with Doyle was intended only to relax her and the request for a bank loan was a ‘joke’.

He felt Doyle had given him permission to contact her as a friend after their consultation and that she was the only patient he had ever contacted.

“I crossed the boundary of a doctor-patient relationship but said that is something I can’t control,” he added.


Nster.com


2 Comments

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Banish him to Siberia - Forever! Do We the SPEEPle even care? Since we obviously don't care about gay & lesbian 'marriage' (sic), why would any care about this matter? In a present status of near Moral Bankruptcy, what's too care about?
This guy should have his ass kicked out of Ireland. It is one more example of the lunacy of Ireland's Mass Immigration project. Young Irish doctors are emigrating in throngs, even tho the Irish taxpayer has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on educating each one of them. The same is happening with Irish nurses, with the difference that the nurses have to emigrate because there's no work for them in Ireland. Nursing jobs--plus Irish citizenship--were handed out to Bangla Deshis and filipinos. All but the most senior levels of medicine in Ireland is now carried out by foreigners. My wife was admitted to hospital for a day or two and in that period she was treated by not one Irish person. She found the level of care and hygiene in this hospital, St Vincents, one of Dublin's premier hospitals, quite atrocious. Indeed she had to tell a filipino nurse how to take her blood pressure, because she was doing it wrong. No doubt about it, and it gives me no pleasure to say it, but the Irish are the biggest fools on the face of the earth!
 




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