Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Weight-Loss Doc Stanley Bernstein Beats Back 'Steering' Complaint

The Canadian Press, 30 Jun, 2016 01:28 PM
    TORONTO — A doctor who set up dozens of weight-loss clinics across Canada has won his legal fight to block a complaint that he "steers" patients in violation of advertising rules.
     
    In siding with Dr. Stanley Bernstein, Ontario's Divisional Court decided against requiring a medical complaints body to review the issue.
     
    The complaint, lodged by Toronto lawyer Peter Rosenthal, alleged that Bernstein draws people in, then passes them on to other doctors in his clinics — a practice that would breach rules against "steering."
     
    "This was fundamentally a complaint about Dr. Bernstein's advertising at a particular point in time several years ago," the doctor's lawyer, Neil Abramson, said Thursday.
     
    "The College of Physicians and Surgeons gave him a caution...and really the matter of steering goes far afield."
     
    In July 2013, a committee of Ontario's College of Physicians and Surgeons declined to rule on the steering complaint. In making its decision, the inquiries, complaints and reports committee said there was no precedent by which to come to a judgment. Additionally, the committee noted it was already ordering a formal caution against Bernstein for making numerous unsubstantiated claims in violation of advertising rules.
     
    Rosenthal appealed the steering-complaint decision, and the appeal and review board ordered the committee to take another look, prompting Bernstein to turn this week to Divisional Court, where he successfully argued the appeal board's decision was unreasonable.
     
    Rosenthal said he would not try to appeal the Divisional Court ruling.
     
    "I will simply hope that the caution that is given will make it clear that Dr. Bernstein cannot continue to allow his name to be used at his clinics," Rosenthal said.
     
    Abramson said Bernstein's clinics continue to operate.
     
    Bernstein, who is known for his weight-loss regimen called the "Dr. Bernstein Diet," set up 62 clinics across the country. In its earlier findings, the complaints committee warned him about using testimonials, comparatives, and superlatives in advertising.
     
    Among other things, Bernstein claimed to have helped "hundreds of thousands of people lose millions of pounds of excess weight and keep it off for life," something the committee and appeal board said strained credulity and was not supported by objective scientific proof.
     
    Part of the problem, Abramson said, was that different provinces have different advertising rules for doctors and his Ontario website had become "contaminated."
     
    "His advertising has changed in the last period of years quite dramatically," Abramson said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    The real winners are sometimes the losers

    The real winners are sometimes the losers
    I had a teacher who used to wake us up by shouting: "The early bird gets the worm." Let him have the worm. I hate food that doesn't stay still on your plate....

    The real winners are sometimes the losers

    Spanish love smartphones, Russians love travel apps

    Spanish love smartphones, Russians love travel apps
    This was found in a survey of 2,300 passengers from Europe taken by SITA, an IT and communications company for the airline industry....

    Spanish love smartphones, Russians love travel apps

    Ghosts only exist in our minds, show scientists

    Ghosts only exist in our minds, show scientists
    Patients suffering from neurological or psychiatric conditions have often reported feeling a strange “feeling of a presence” (FoP) phenomenon....

    Ghosts only exist in our minds, show scientists

    How love makes us mean

    How love makes us mean
    A study conducted by the University of Buffalo researchers says that our feelings of love can compel us to do harmful and sometimes violent things...

    How love makes us mean

    People prefer leaders with healthy looks

    People prefer leaders with healthy looks
    People look for candidates with a healthy complexion when choosing leaders, says a study, adding that they do not favour intelligent-looking...

    People prefer leaders with healthy looks

    Thinking out of the box may not ensure creative solutions

    Thinking out of the box may not ensure creative solutions
    Thinking out of the box or using unrelated concepts to come up with a solutions to problems is not always the best idea, a study says....

    Thinking out of the box may not ensure creative solutions