Close X
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Sports Doctor Who Treated Elite U.S. Athletes Guilty Of Misconduct

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Oct, 2016 12:56 PM
    TORONTO — A renowned Canadian sports doctor who helped big-name athletes come back from injuries has been found guilty of professional misconduct.
     
    The decision against Dr. Anthony Galea whose client list included golfer Tiger Woods and other stars stems from his conviction in the United States for importing unapproved and mislabelled drugs, Ontario's medical regulatory body said in its decision.
     
    "He has been found guilty of an offence relevant to his suitability to practise, and he engaged in an act or omission relevant to the practise of medicine that, having regard to all the circumstances, would reasonably be regarded by members as disgraceful, dishonourable, or unprofessional," the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario said.
     
    A penalty hearing has yet to be held and he is currently able to practise without restrictions, according to the college.
     
    Galea was not commenting Friday, referring questions to his lawyer, who was not immediately available.
     
    The physician, who was not licensed to practise medicine in the U.S., nevertheless treated numerous elite athletes there, including football, basketball and baseball players between 2007 and 2009. He was usually assisted by Mary Anne Catalano, an employee of his west-Toronto clinic, the Institute of Sports Medicine Health and Wellness Centre.
     
    Some of the medical supplies they carried were misbranded drugs.
     
    "Dr. Galea and the employee understood that if she was asked by U.S. border officers about the purpose for her entry into the United States with the medical supplies, she would respond that she was attending a medical conference where Dr. Galea would speak and demonstrate the use of medical supplies," the college said.
     
     
    "Dr. Galea and the employee knew, however, that on the majority of the occasions they came to the United States, their only purpose for coming to the U.S. was to provide medical treatments to Dr. Galea's patients."
     
    The treatments, for which Galea earned about $800,000, occurred at the athletes' homes or in hotel rooms.
     
    The situation unravelled in September 2009, when Galea's employee was arrested by American authorities in Buffalo, N.Y., after she was found with various drugs and medical supplies. She later pleaded guilty to making a false statement and was handed a one-year probation.
     
    Galea also pleaded guilty to the importing offence in July 2011 in New York and apologized to the American government, his wife and his assistance. He was sentenced in December 2011 to one day time served and a year's probation.
     
    Canadian prosecutors also charged him with various drug and smuggling offences in Canada but those were stayed in 2012. At the time, his lawyer called the alleged offences minor in nature.
     
    The former team doctor for the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League was widely known for a blood-spinning injury treatment, but prosecutors said some patients received human growth hormone, which is banned by major sports.
     
    Athletes sought him out for platelet-rich plasma therapy, a treatment used to speed healing that involves extracting blood from patients and reinjecting just the plasma.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown
    Police say officers recovered the lions and they have been returned to their original spots in front of the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden.

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for a group of patients who support Canada's public health-care system says a private surgery clinic's legal crusade to change British Columbia's medicare laws puts profit over people.

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast
    The juvenile humpback was freed from several ropes at the Marine Harvest aquaculture site in Klemtu, B.C. by Fisheries and Oceans Canada, with help from the company and the Kitasoo First Nation

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett
    Mounties say Kenneth Fenton faces five charges related to the crash that took the life of Const. Sarah Beckett on April 5 in Langford, B.C.

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick
    Five soldiers with minor injuries were being treated on the base Wednesday, while four others were taken to hospital in Fredericton with serious injuries.

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick

    Delta, B.C. Police Investigating 2 Suspicious Early Morning House Fires

    Delta, B.C. Police Investigating 2 Suspicious Early Morning House Fires
    On September 13th, 2016 at 0412 hours, at the request of the Delta Fire Department, Delta Police responded to a house fire in the 7500 block of 120th street. 

    Delta, B.C. Police Investigating 2 Suspicious Early Morning House Fires