Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Fertility Doctor Accused Of Impregnating Patients With His Own Sperm

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Nov, 2016 12:56 PM
    An Ontario doctor once suspended for inseminating women with the wrong sperm at his fertility clinic is now accused of allegedly using his own biological material to impregnate certain patients who came to him for treatment.
     
    An Ottawa family has filed a proposed class-action lawsuit against Dr. Bernard Norman Barwin, alleging he is the biological father of their 26-year-old daughter.
     
    In a statement of claim, the family alleges Barwin falsely claimed to be using Daniel Dixon's sperm to inseminate the man's wife, Davina, in 1990 when the couple was trying to conceive a child.
     
    It claims the couple had a daughter, Rebecca, but DNA tests have conclusively shown that she is not Daniel Dixon's biological child.
     
    The statement of claim says Rebecca Dixon, who has filed the legal action along with her parents, has reason to believe she is also related to a Vancouver woman who has been proven to be Barwin's biological daughter.
     
    Barwin's lawyer, Karen Hamway, said a statement of defence will be filed in the coming weeks and declined to offer any further comment. None of the allegations against Barwin have been proven in court.
     
    All three Dixons are seeking general damages for pain and suffering, special damages for out-of-pocket costs including DNA testing, punitive damages, and the chance to pursue Barwin for child support.
     
    "The defendant's reckless and wanton conduct, including the cavalier use of his own sperm in his insemination procedures, demonstrated a reprehensible disregard for the health, safety and rights of the plaintiffs, the members of the plaintiff classes and of the general public," the Dixons' statement of claim said.
     
    Barwin's dealings with the Dixon family began in 1989 when Daniel and Davina Dixon came to the Ottawa-based Broadview Fertility clinic for treatment, according to the statement of claim.
     
    Over the course of numerous fertility treatments, the suit alleges Barwin assured the couple Davina Dixon was being inseminated with sperm provided by her husband.
     
    Rebecca Dixon was born in June 1990, the suit said, adding the family did not question her paternity until earlier this year.
     
    At that time, it said, Davina Dixon grew concerned after learning that it was impossible for two blue-eyed parents to conceive a brown-eyed child, as had apparently happened in her family's case.
     
     
    The family sought DNA testing and learned in April 2015 that Daniel Dixon had a 0 per cent probability of being Rebecca Dixon's biological father, the statement of claim said.
     
    According to the suit, the family then began digging into Barwin's well-documented history with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario.
     
    The regulatory body suspended Barwin's license for two months in 2013 and issued a reprimand over practices at the Broadview clinic.
     
    In an agreed statement of facts presented at his disciplinary hearing, Barwin admitted that "errors in his practice...resulted in his failure to provide his patients with offspring from their intended biological fathers."
     
    Barwin's license was reactivated in March 2013, but college records indicate he resigned it permanently in August 2014.
     
    By that time, he had also lost his status as a member of the Order of Canada, which was granted in 1997 for his "profound impact on both the biological and psycho-social aspects of women's reproductive health. "
     
    Rebecca Dixon noticed a physical resemblance between herself and Barwin, according to the lawsuit, and tried to uncover more information.
     
     
    An ancestry website that analyzed her DNA profile concluded that her main genetic composition was Ashkenazi Jewish. Barwin identifies as a member of the Ottawa Jewish community, according to the suit.
     
    Months later, she connected with Kathryn Palmer of Vancouver, who was also conceived at the Broadview clinic.
     
    Palmer had undertaken her own investigations into her parentage after learning that she was conceived with the help of an anonymous sperm donor in 1990, the statement of claim said.
     
    Palmer eventually traced her ancestry back to Barwin, connected with him directly, and obtained DNA tests concluding that she was his biological child, it said.
     
    After sharing stories, Palmer and Rebecca Dixon underwent further testing to determine if they were related. DNA results concluded that the women were half-sisters by way of the same biological father, the statement of claim said.
     
    The suit alleges Barwin breached numerous contractual and fiduciary duties by using his own sperm to impregnate Davina Dixon.
     
    "Davina consented and only consented to Dr. Barwin using her husband's sperm for the purposes of artificial insemination," the claim states. "As a result of Dr. Barwin's use of his own sperm in the insemination procedure, Dr. Barwin violated her bodily integrity."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Health Officials Look Into Needles, Scalpels Found In Hospital Linen

    Saskatchewan Health Officials Look Into Needles, Scalpels Found In Hospital Linen
    REGINA — The Opposition in Saskatchewan says it's alarmed that sharp objects have been found in clean hospital linen.

    Saskatchewan Health Officials Look Into Needles, Scalpels Found In Hospital Linen

    Nurse Accused In Deaths Of 8 Elderly Nursing Home Residents Appears In Court

    Nurse Accused In Deaths Of 8 Elderly Nursing Home Residents Appears In Court
    Elizabeth Wettlaufer, 49, was charged last week with eight counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of elderly residents at nursing homes in Woodstock, Ont., and London, Ont.

    Nurse Accused In Deaths Of 8 Elderly Nursing Home Residents Appears In Court

    Longtime CBC Comedian Dave Broadfoot Dead At 90

    Longtime CBC Comedian Dave Broadfoot Dead At 90
    TORONTO — Canadian comedy pioneer Dave Broadfoot, who was considered a national treasure for his political satire on the CBC's "Royal Canadian Air Farce," has died at the age of 90.

    Longtime CBC Comedian Dave Broadfoot Dead At 90

    File With 1,000 Patient Records Taken From Office In Winnipeg Hospital

    File With 1,000 Patient Records Taken From Office In Winnipeg Hospital
    Real Cloutier with the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority says the file was taken from a diagnostic imaging office at the Health Sciences Centre on Oct. 7.

    File With 1,000 Patient Records Taken From Office In Winnipeg Hospital

    World Record Attempt At Screenings For Sexually Transmitted Infections

    World Record Attempt At Screenings For Sexually Transmitted Infections
      Some 812 people were tested for STIs last February at Western University in London, Ont.

    World Record Attempt At Screenings For Sexually Transmitted Infections

    Death Of Man Found In Maple Ridge, B.C., Appears Targeted: Police

    Death Of Man Found In Maple Ridge, B.C., Appears Targeted: Police
    Homicide investigators say the 53-year-old's body was found on Tuesday.

    Death Of Man Found In Maple Ridge, B.C., Appears Targeted: Police