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MOH to replace Sinkies with CECA doctors

A Singaporean

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IMG-20220927-WA0002.jpg
 

Boliao

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The Indianization of Cecapore begins. Avijit Patnaik was telling us the hard truth but we did not listen.

Screenshot 2022-09-27 at 6.54.51 PM.png
 

laksaboy

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Asset
The top local doctors will be reserved for the elites. As for the peasants, they can look forward to being treated by CECA and Burmese doctors. :biggrin:
 

Qantas

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The Indianization of Cecapore begins. Avijit Patnaik was telling us the hard truth but we did not listen.

The Indianization of Cecapore begins. Avijit Patnaik was telling us the hard truth but we did not listen.

View attachment 162511
What do you mean’begins’? The Indianisation of our IT industry, banking and higher education institutions have been completed. They are now starting with the health sector followed by the rest sooner or later.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
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Catch up with The Loop, your quick wrap of this morning's news

Fake doctor Shyam Acharya given maximum fine for deception​

By Nick Dole
Posted Mon 3 Apr 2017 at 8:36pmMonday 3 Apr 2017 at 8:36pm
Fake passport used by Shyam Acharya

A passport which shows Shyam Acharya but uses Sarang Chitale's details.(Supplied)
Help keep family & friends informed by sharing this article

A man who masqueraded as a doctor in New South Wales hospitals for more than a decade has been fined the maximum amount of $30,000 for stealing the identity of a qualified doctor.

Key points:​

  • Shyam Acharya pretended to be Sarang Chitale, after he stole Chitale's documents in India
  • Acharya was reported to AHPRA by an employer, Novotech
  • The NSW Health Minister said he plans to seize Acharya's North Ryde home

From 2003 to 2014, Shyam Acharya worked in the public health system, treating patients in Wyong, Gosford, Hornsby, Royal North Shore, Manly and Mona Vale hospitals, and used the name Sarang Chitale.
Downing Centre Local Court was told that Acharya had lived with the real Dr Chitale and the doctor's grandmother in India between 1999 and 2000.
During that time, he stole Dr Chitale's identity documents and medical qualifications and later used them to gain Australian citizenship and medical registration.
On Monday, the case against Acharya proceeded without him, as the court was told he left the country in January, three days after being served with a court attendance notice.
Natasha Blake, representing the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA), told the court that Acharya had engaged in a "lengthy period of deception".
"He hasn't just held himself out to possess the qualifications, he has assumed someone else's identity," she said.

Deception discovered​

The court heard that in 2015, Acharya was appointed Medical Director at research firm Novotech.
The company discovered his credentials matched that of the real Dr Chitale, who was living in the United Kingdom.
His superiors then asked their employee to confirm that his CV was accurate and he signed a document stating that it was.
Magistrate Jennifer Atkinson found Acharya's conduct was in the "worst category" and imposed the maximum penalty available for fraudulently claiming to be a doctor — a $30,000 fine.
Health Minister Brad Hazzard has already confirmed plans to seize Acharya's North Ryde home.
In March, federal and state health ministers agreed to change legislation, to ensure that people who fake medical credentials face jail time.
Posted 3 Apr 2017
 

Leongsam

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zeenews.india.com


Maharashtra: 103 bogus doctors, 166 unregistered medical practitioners caught in Jalna district​


Edited By: Aditi Sharma|Last Updated: May 22, 2022, 11:06 AM IST|Source: PTI

2 minutes



Jalna: At least 103 bogus doctors, 166 unregistered medical practitioners were found practising illegally in Maharashtra's Jalna district, an official said on Saturday. As per a report from the health department, the district had 433 doctors, of which 267 were registered, 166 were not registered with the Maharashtra Medical Council (MMC), while 103 did not have valid degrees and were declared bogus.
These bogus doctors operated in rural areas and slums, endangering lives, the report stated.
Jalna tehsil has the highest number of quacks at 25, followed by Bhokardan and Jafrabad with 17, Badnapur with 10, Ghansawangi with nine, Partur with eight and Mantha with four, it said.
ALSO READ: 30 policemen hurt as Maharashtra villagers clash over Shivaji statue, 300 booked
Notably, state Health Minister Rajesh Tope hails from Jalna and is also the guardian minister of the district.
Ambad, which is Tope's hometown, has 65 unregistered doctors, followed by Mantha with 46, Partur with 30, Bhokardan with 13, Jalna with seven and Ghansawangi tehsil with four, the report said.
District health officer Dr Vivek Khatgaonkar said the health department has initiated action against bogus doctors and unregistered medical practitioners.
Tope had earlier directed the health department to launch a drive against bogus doctors and illegal abortion centres in the district.
Meanwhile, taluka health officer Dr Sheetal Soni made surprise visits and inspected more than 20 clinics and hospitals in Jalna tehsil.
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countryman

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MOH Sinkieland doesn't mind fake ceca doctors, the more the merrier....
Local Sinkie doctors will have to apply for jobs elsewhere..
 

Byebye Penis

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Loyal
It is disheartening that we continue to train foreign-born children in NUS and NTU MBBS while more local aspiring students forced to pursue medical studies in UK, Aust and NZ.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset

Imposter doctor Yuvaraj Krishnan facing 10 more charges​

Catrin Owen and Edward Gay14:07, Sep 28 2022
Yuvaraj Krishnan leaves Manukau District court after pleading guilty to using a forged document to get an advantage.

RICKY WILSON/STUFF
Yuvaraj Krishnan leaves Manukau District court after pleading guilty to using a forged document to get an advantage.

A man who used fake documents to secure a job as a doctor is now facing 10 more changes.
Yuvaraj Krishnan pleaded guilty in early September to using a forged document to get an advantage.
Detective Senior Sergeant Veronica McPherson said the 30-year-old has been summoned to appear at the Manukau District Court on charges relating to forgery and using a document for a pecuniary advantage.

He is expected to appear on October 25.
READ MORE:
* Imposter doctor at Middlemore was caught out by colleague, documents show
* Alleged imposter doctor enters no plea on forgery charge
* Alleged imposter doctor’s web of lies spanned continents for more than a decade
* Yuvaraj Krishnan: What we know about alleged fake Middlemore doctor

“As the matter remains before the court, police are unable to comment further,” McPherson said.

Krishnan worked for six months as a doctor at Auckland’s Middlemore Hospital until questions were raised about his medical qualifications. He was sacked on August 10 and charged eight days later.


Alleged imposter doctor being investigated



STUFF
Yuvaraj Krishnan is under investigation after allegedly using fake documents to secure a job at Middlemore Hospital. (Video first published August 12, 2022)
According to court documents released to Stuff after Krishnan pleaded guilty to using a forged document, Krishnan’s role was mainly in research but he also ran out-patient clinics.
He is believed to have examined up to 80 patients during his time at the hospital.
Doctors in New Zealand must hold an up-to-date medical practising certificate. Court documents show Krishnan has never held one.
In December 2021, he applied for a job at Middlemore’s respiratory clinic. Following the interview, he sent a false certificate and fake email from the Medical Council that claimed to verify his suitability for the position.
“The email was also fraudulent – the name and position of the so-called employee at the [Medical Council] does not exist, and the information provided in that email does not align with [Medical Council] policy,” the court document says.
Yuvaraj Krishnan at the Manukau District Court when he admitted one charge.

Ricky Wilson/Stuff
Yuvaraj Krishnan at the Manukau District Court when he admitted one charge.
A simple search of the Medical Council of New Zealand register of doctors, which any member of the public can do, does not return results on Krishnan’s name.
However, six months would pass before Krishnan’s forgery was discovered.
“The defendant was only discovered after a doctor recognised his name from a previous incident in 2012 when he was caught attending the University of Auckland without being accepted into the course,” the agreed summary of facts said.
“The defendant was trespassed from the university after that incident, having two years’ worth of tertiary education without authority.”

A fellow doctor previously said Krishnan was found to have forged a student ID card and was doing cadaver dissections.

more from Catrin Owen • Auckland court reporter Mae Catrin Owen yn newyddiadurwr Cymraeg yn Auckland
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Before taking up the job at Middlemore, Krishnan was employed at Te Whatu Ora Te Toka Tumai Auckland, previously the Auckland District Health Board, from December 2020 until February 2022.
“During this period the individual carried out a non-clinical role under supervision. The role had no patient contact and did not require a practising certificate,” a Te Whatu Ora spokesperson said.
It is understood he worked at the Greenlane Medical Centre in a Covid-19 contact tracing team, calling high-risk people isolating with the virus.
While employed there, Krishnan was convicted of two driving charges: operating a vehicle carelessly and failing to stop or ascertain injury. He was convicted and discharged by Judge Nevin Dawson.

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However, he appealed to the High Court at Auckland, saying he was concerned about how the convictions would impact his eligibility to practise medicine in New Zealand and to train in the United States.
Krishnan provided two letters to the court to support his case – one supposedly from the Medical Council and one from James Worthy, an Auckland DHB clinic manager.
However, both the Medical Council and the DHB later said they did not provide those letters and there was no record of a James Worthy working for the DHB.
Krishnan was granted a discharge without conviction on the driving charges.
 
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