Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Fertility Doctor Used Own Sperm To Inseminate Patients: Medical Regulator

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2019 07:38 PM

    TORONTO — Ontario's medical regulator says a fertility doctor used his own sperm to inseminate several patients as well as the wrong sperm with several others, finding that he committed professional misconduct.


    A discipline committee of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario is now being asked to revoke Dr. Bernard Norman Barwin's medical licence.


    An uncontested statement of facts read before the committee lays out the cases of more than a dozen patients who say they suffered irreparable harm as a result of Barwin's actions.


    The 80-year-old, who did not attend the hearing, pleaded no contest to the allegations through his lawyer.


    According to the statement of facts, an expert retained by the college to review Barwin's case found it was unlikely the doctor's use of his own sperm was accidental.


    Barwin had previously been disciplined for artificially inseminating several women with the wrong sperm, admitting to professional misconduct when he appeared before committee in 2013.


    At the time, Barwin said errors in his practice had left three patients with children whose biological fathers were not the ones they intended.


    The committee then suspended him from practising medicine for two months, but Barwin gave up his licence the following year.


    Barwin faced fresh allegations today of incompetence, failing to maintain the standard of practice of the profession and of engaging in dishonourable or unprofessional conduct.


    If the committee decides to revoke Barwin's licence, other medical regulators would be alerted should he apply to practise medicine elsewhere.


    Barwin is also facing a proposed class-action lawsuit launched by several of his patients. The lawsuit alleges more than 50 children were conceived after their mothers were inseminated with the wrong sperm, including 11 with Barwin's.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Toddler Airlifted After Tumble From Third-Floor Balcony In Kelowna

    B.C. Toddler Airlifted After Tumble From Third-Floor Balcony In Kelowna
     A toddler had to be airlifted to hospital in Vancouver after tumbling from a third-floor balcony in Kelowna, B.C.

    B.C. Toddler Airlifted After Tumble From Third-Floor Balcony In Kelowna

    Surrey Man Harmit Johal Charged With Impersonating Cop To Get Money From Elderly Couple

    Surrey Man Harmit Johal Charged With Impersonating Cop To Get Money From Elderly Couple
    RCMP say they received a report of a man posing as an undercover police officer and telling a couple he was investigating counterfeit money.

    Surrey Man Harmit Johal Charged With Impersonating Cop To Get Money From Elderly Couple

    Woman Testifies About Strange Dynamic In Home Shared With Winnipeg Murder Suspect

    WINNIPEG — A woman says there was a strange dynamic in a house several women shared with a man who is accused of killing one of them.

    Woman Testifies About Strange Dynamic In Home Shared With Winnipeg Murder Suspect

    Countermeasures Were Key To Ending Tariff Stalemate With U.S., Says Trudeau

    SEPT-ÎLES, Que. — Canada's retaliatory tariffs on American goods played a key role in restoring free access to the U.S. market for Canadian steel and aluminum, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says.

    Countermeasures Were Key To Ending Tariff Stalemate With U.S., Says Trudeau

    Deported Dangerous Offender Argues Charge That Would Keep Him In U.S. Jail Too Old

    Deported Dangerous Offender Argues Charge That Would Keep Him In U.S. Jail Too Old
    The prosecutor says Shrubsall's arguments are weak, given that he is accused of fleeing his own trial in May 1996, leaving behind a suicide note before he disappeared into Canada.

    Deported Dangerous Offender Argues Charge That Would Keep Him In U.S. Jail Too Old

    Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures

    Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures
    HAMILTON — Ontario researchers say they've come up with a way to store vaccines at higher temperatures for weeks at a time.    

    Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures