Site icon The People's Voice

Doctor Who Was Suspended For Asking A Muslim Woman To Remove Her Veil, Struck off

A GP who continued working after he’d been suspended for asking a Muslim patient to remove her veil, has been struck off.

In 2022, Keith Wolverson was suspended for nine months over misconduct claims after he “caused” the patient to remove the covering following repeated requests for her to do so.

He said he asked her to remove the veil because she “spoke poor English” and he was “struggling to understand her”.

The Telegraph reports: However, while he was suspended for nine months for misconduct, he continued to undertake locum work, in defiance of explicit instruction given by a misconduct panel.

On account of his “flagrant disregard for the regulatory process” and his failure to attend the Medical Practitioners Tribunal hearing, he has now been struck off.

In 2022, Dr Wolverson was found guilty of or admitted a total of 17 charges of misconduct relating to incidents between January and May 2018 while working as a locum at urgent care centres in Derby and Stoke. He was suspended for nine months.

In one incident at Royal Stoke University Hospital, he asked a Muslim woman, named only as Mrs Q by the tribunal, to take off her niqab three times during a consultation on May 13, 2018, saying he could not hear her describing her daughter’s symptoms.

She refused his initial request, saying she did not want to do so for religious reasons, but he then repeated it.

In an email later that month in response to the complaint, Dr Wolverson said she “spoke poor English”, that he was “struggling to understand her” and was “trying to look at her mouth movements to aid communication”, which the tribunal deemed to be dishonest.

In other incidents, he wrote in the notes of 15 patients criticising their English speaking skills and those of their relatives between January and April 2018, claiming it was “unacceptable” and “not good enough”.

At a review hearing in 2023, Dr Wolverson said he had reflected on the incidents, had considered how he would handle similar situations differently and “deeply regretted the comments he made in the patients’ medical notes”.

He told the tribunal: “It would be completely wrong to maintain the suspension and prohibit a doctor further from doing his duty to his patients when there are such grave shortages within the NHS currently.”

The tribunal ruled that Dr Wolverson’s fitness to practise remained impaired, but decided not to extend his suspension. It imposed conditions on his registration for a further 12 months, including being monitored.

He later returned to work under supervision because of “grave shortages within the NHS”.

However, in 2024 it was uncovered that he had undertaken locum shifts while he was suspended in 2022.

Exit mobile version