Thursday, October 1, 2009

GP was dealing with a daughter, age 17, when he was their treatment of acne

A "narcissistic" GP persuaded a patient suffering from teenage acne with learning difficulties in a sexual act on him in practice was abducted on medical register today.

Dr. Steven Ashenford abused his position of trust to respond in a "horrible" about the sexually naive to win 17-year-old girl who led a body of experts. He said he had no idea the damage his actions caused to vulnerable young people.

Dr. Ashenford became friends with the girl in appointments in medical practice Sutton Hill, Telford, Shropshire, back to treat their acne and bad. During a hearing in March 2007, he touched her breasts and said: "That was nice.

A week later he told her to remove her top and verbally with him in surgery, is the General Medical Council hearing said.

He continued to buy him an iPod for his birthday and end up in cafes, where they "kissed and snogged. It was introduced in October 2007 on suspicion of raping young girls, but no charges have been arrested by police.

Dr. Ashenford denied any sexual relationship with the girl known, patient E, but gave the court he had sex with two other patients, while working at Oakengates Medical Practice in Telford in 2006, Sutton Hill a year later. The GP has also made friends with a 11 year old girl when he worked at the Princess Royal Hospital in Telford, he sent 10 text messages per day and social plans with her mother. It must have a history of "issues of professional boundaries in relationships with patients.

His colleagues have expressed the fear that he circulated his cell phone number for the patient and the rejection of his domestic misery. The ability to sit on the Practice Committee Manchester was told that the doctor who qualified at the University of Aberdeen in 2001, was married to an elderly Russian woman and had a daughter, was brain damaged at birth.

He noted that a review consultant psychiatrist Dr Ashenford completed in February this year and he had a "narcissistic" and "fundamentally flawed" personality. Many of the certificates associated with its name from its previous practice, when the fault occurred and, even then, the most referred professional boundaries are concerned.

Group Chairman Ralph Bergmann said: "The Committee believes that you do not preview your actions caused damage to the east of the patient, if the trust placed in them misused." He added that the group had no evidence that patient E was sexually active before her relationship with Dr. Ashenford heard. "The nature, extent and severity of the misconduct warrants the removal of your name on his own, he said.

Mr. Miner concludes that the doctor was a total behavior "so severe that we fundamentally incompatible with the continuous recording.

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