Especially in a pandemic.
By Physician’s Weekly blogger, Skeptical Scalpel
The Oregon Medical Board suspended the license of family practitioner Steven Latulippe for what it called “unprofessional or dishonorable conduct.” The board said his behavior was “an immediate danger to the public.”
His transgressions included the following: he told a patient that wearing a mask did not prevent transmission; he told a patient “not to self isolate because being around other people would provide immunity” from the virus; his staff did not wear masks; his patients were encouraged to remove their masks; he said in a video that Covid-19 was like a common cold.
Since when did a common cold cause 300,000 deaths?
Although Latulippe did not wear a mask when seeing patients, he required patients who thought they might have the virus or had virus-like symptoms to wear masks. He saw these patients at the end of the day in a special room that was disinfected before and after the encounter. Those are strange protocols for an illness that is supposedly like a common cold.
In a December 11 New York Times op-ed, psychiatrist Richard Friedman said we are not doing enough to stop dangerous doctors and likened their spreading misinformation to “something akin to malpractice.”
He called out Scott Atlas, a radiologist and Trump’s former special coronavirus advisor, for claiming masks did not work and supporting herd immunity and two other physicians, mask and social distance denier Ramin Oskoui and Jane Orient, a vaccine skeptic and hydroxychloroquine advocate.
Friedman supported the Latulippe’s license suspension saying, “Doctors who provide outrageous advice that is far outside the bounds of accepted standards should be investigated by their state board and subject to sanctions, including revocation of their medical license.”
He acknowledged there can be different ways to treat certain illnesses but said “no doctor should get away with pushing bad advice, especially during a pandemic.”
Kudos to the Oregon Medical Board for also suspending the license of pediatrician Paul Thomas who discourages parents from vaccinating their children. One of his patients, a 9-year-old boy, had never received any vaccinations. After suffering a scalp laceration on his family’s farm, he developed tetanus leading to a two-month ICU stay requiring intubation, tracheostomy, and tube feeding.
After the child was discharged from a rehabilitation center, the icing on the cake was that instead of immunizing him against tetanus, Thomas referred him to a homeopath who recommended fish oil supplements and “phosphatidyl seine.” The latter is a typo from the medical board’s Order of Emergency Suspension which should have read “phosphatidylserine.” A phospholipid found in the brain, it has been touted (without proof) as an Alzheimer’s treatment and a “brain supplement.” I found no evidence that it has any effect on post-tetanus symptoms.
Let’s hope this is the start of a movement. We need more physicians and medical boards to speak up and sanction physicians who have lost their way.
Skeptical Scalpel is a retired surgeon and was a surgical department chair and residency program director for many years. He is board-certified in general surgery and a surgical sub-specialty and has re-certified in both several times. For the last 9 years, he has been blogging at SkepticalScalpel.blogspot.com and tweeting as @SkepticScalpel. His blog has had more than 3,700,000 page views, and he has over 21,000 followers on Twitter.
I have not seen any harm caused by Dr Thomas. A child was sick; he got better. The medical board is simply angry that his patients, on average, are healthier than children in other practices. If this Dr. is stripped of his license because kids got sick, then any Dr of a child or teen or adult who dies because of a vaccine, as does happen, should also be stipped of their license. I have watched it happen. Let’s make the “rule” apply to all, eh? Getting sick is OK, and getting measles, for instance, is rarely deadly. In fact, the only deaths from Measles we have seen over the past several years have been caused by the vaccine. Most of Dr. Thomas’ patients see him becasue they will not be forced to do somethng they do not want to do. This needs to be taken into consideration.
And how would the Oregon Medical board view the work of Barry Marshall, a doctor of internal medicine, and Robin Warren, a bachelor of medicine and bachelor of surgery with a pathology specialty, described the role of H. pylori infection and Peptic Ulcer Disease? Would they still hold to the notion that Ulcers were caused by spicy foods and stress. If history holds true and is any indication of future recognition, family practitioner Steven Latulippe will be winning the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
HIPPORATIC OATH EXISTENCE
Where is the hippocratic oath thy shall treat a fellow physician with compassion as our own when recently an Ohio physician died of COVID 19 claiming that she was mistreated because of being black.
We shall see no color,race or religion for all our patients.Will the Ohio medical board dig into this.
Agree with Thomas and rural doctor. Fauci has already reversed himself regarding herd immunity. I’m wondering how the author of this article feels about the Great Barrington Declaration. Should 40,000+ doctors be dragged before their medical boards to revoke their licenses?
I’m very disappointed that even the primary care-ish medical societies (AMA, AAFP, AAP, AOA and ACOG) won’t come out publicly against the rogue physicians like Joe Mercola DO (huge conspiracy theory/supplement web site, very antivax and anti-covid mitigation), Jane Orient MD (anti-vax and runs AAPS which is an unhinged group), Frontline Physicians and a few others who as MDs and DOs have very publicly sabotaged mitigation and now COVID-19 vaccination efforts. To do this with the authority of and MD or DO in the middle of the worst medical emergency in US history is unconscionable and needs calling out. I’d also like to see these groups call on state medical boards to suspend rogue physician licenses until at least the pandemic is over (but I’d be ok for forever, too), and I’d like to see the physician-leaders of these societies publicly take the vaccine that a lot of people are hesitant about (and I’m still eagerly awaiting as a pediatrician). They need to walk the walk, mind you they are barely talking the talk. The anti-vax movement in the US has had 20 years of growth unopposed publicly by any of these societies (there are anti-vax FAAPs, FAAFPs, FACOGs, etc for pete’s sake) and now they’s become anti-public health and their unchecked growth is coming home to roost where I suspect it will cost 50K-100K lives because people believe them, esp when the good, science-based doctors have done little to oppose them. –Chris Hickie, MD, PhD
I agree that all doctors who refuse to comply and follow the National doctrine that cOVID is the worst thing ever, or refuse to back a full shutdown with jail time and license revocation for any doctors that don’t get in line with the current narrative.
Perhaps Tony and Joe can also mandate a national uniform for us to wear so rebels can easily be identified and punished.
Get in line? Rebel? As Medical Professionals we should question the validity of so called correct information. The US was never meant to be a Police state, It was designed as a Republic. Your talking like a communist–“refuse to back a full shutdown” even if you believe and have evidence to the contrary?
Melissa, you did not perceive the sarcasm of Thomas. He is pointing out what, perhaps, Mr. Hickie would love to see happen.
Patients purchase an opinion. They are free to find a second opinion. What I am hearing is akin to medical fascism. Echo CDC (changes daily), or be stripped of your license. Giving bad advice is bad medicine, but do we really need to let Big Gov tell us how to practice medicine? Maybe an appearance before the state board would be in order, and a chance to explain the physicians thought process. Collegial, the way physicians should discuss ideas.