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Decision No: | 97/17D | |
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Practitioner: | Dr Richard Johnathan Charles Walkey | |
Charge Characteristics: | Inadequate
care Informed consent Breach of Code Failure to provide a chaperone Sexual Misconduct |
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Additional Orders: | Granted application for private
hearing (majority
decision): 9717dhearpriminlaw Doctor granted interim name suppression: 9717dhearpriminlaw Doctor's interim name suppression discontinued: 9717dfindingslaw Complainant granted permanent name suppression: 9717dfindingslaw |
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Full Decision: | 9717dfindingslaw |
Charge:
The Director of Proceedings charged that Dr Walkey was guilty of disgraceful conduct in a professional respect in that his management and treatment of a female patient was inappropriate. After the Tribunal made some amendments to the charge at the beginning of the hearing the particulars were as follows:
The basis of the charge was that the actions of Dr Walkey were in clear breach of the Medical Council's Chaperone Statement and its Statement on Sexual Abuse in the Doctor/Patient Relationship.
Finding:
A majority of the Tribunal found that Dr Walkey was guilty of professional misconduct. The majority (Dr Reid dissenting) considered that the conduct fell short of disgraceful conduct in a professional respect. It did not consider that Dr Walkey's misconduct was in any sense either wilful, deliberate, intended or premeditated or that it occurred with sexual intent or for the purpose of sexual gratification.
Dr Walkey acknowledged that his management of the patient could be termed paternalistic and that he did not give the patient the option of applying the ointment herself or arrange a chaperone or give cognisance to her serious history of sexual abuse. In view of this acknowledgement the Tribunal found particulars 2, 3 5 and 6 of the charge were proven. It regarded the failure to provide a chaperone as a serious omission, particularly given the patients past history of sexual abuse and the clear Medical Council requirement that a chaperone be present during internal/intimate examinations. The Tribunal found that Dr Walkey's application of ointment to the patient's vulval area amounted to sexual impropriety.
The Tribunal found particular 4 was not proven to the required standard, and it did not need to consider particular 7.
Penalty:
Dr Walkey was censured, fined $2000 (after taking into account submission by counsel for Dr Walkey), and ordered to pay 40% of the costs of the inquiry and the hearing. The Tribunal further ordered publication of the hearing in the New Zealand Medical Journal.
On the basis of an undertaking by Dr Walkely not to practice medicine beyond 31 March 1998, not to renew his practising certificate and not to conduct intimate examinations of female patients other than in the presence of a chaperone, the Tribunal did not impose a period of suspension. Dr Walkey has since retired.