A doctor who cut his wife’s throat with a kitchen knife after she overdosed on cocaine and then waited more than three hours to call for help wanted $300,000 in lost earnings from the medical regulator because they failed to process his application to resume practice., was referred by a coroner in June to prosecutors for negligent manslaughter by failing to call an ambulance upon discovering wife Mayumi Spencer, 29, in need of urgent medical help.
The regulator’s main concern, the letter said, was that Spencer was an intravenous cocaine user himself, a habit that he was unlikely to start again because, they said, it represented “an eternal legacy of grief over how tragically such behaviours can go wrong”.AHPRA said they would not process the application until after criminal investigations were completed. Spencer applied again in January 2020, but he was still not registered.
Spencer told the tribunal his application should be urgently processed because he is a respiratory specialist and his skills were needed during the pandemic. He did not specifically identify what period the $300,000 applied to.The coroner’s finding said Spencer told investigators his wife had a fit about 4am and began vomiting. He tried to resuscitate her before, believing she had a blockage in her throat, attempting to perform a procedure called a cricothyroidotomy.He called paramedics at 7.
“That AHPRA resorts to lying and misleading to keep up the ruse is unforgivable. No matter how you put it, that is the truth of the matter.” “No matter what inferences you want to draw, at some point, there is a precedent for letting doctors involved in tragic events like this practice again. You cannot keep me out indefinitely, and given the amount of time that has passed, that is what you are doing.“
Belgique Dernières Nouvelles, Belgique Actualités
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