Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Small-town N.S. Doctor Loses Licence After Underreporting His Qualifications

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jul, 2016 01:31 PM
    HALIFAX — A much-needed doctor recruited from overseas to serve a small Nova Scotia town has had his medical licence revoked because he under-reported his qualifications.
     
    It seems an unlikely outcome for Dr. Mohsen Yavari, whose 2013 arrival in Glace Bay, N.S., was greeted with a story in the local Cape Breton Post detailing the excitement in an aging community badly in need of physicians.
     
    But Yavari didn't disclose the six years he spent as an emergency medicine specialist in Dubai when he applied to a program to bring foreign doctors to serve as family physicians in under-serviced parts of Nova Scotia.
     
    In a new decision, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia said the Iranian-born Yavari was intentionally deceptive about qualifications that would have made him ineligible for the family physician program.
     
    "There can be no doubt the dishonesty was strategic and wilful," a college investigations committee wrote in its decision, dated July 7.
     
    "Dr. Yavari has been rewarded already for an effective and strategic misrepresentation. Will this invite other such applications? Were other appropriately qualified candidates disadvantaged by Dr. Yavari's dishonesty?"
     
    The college acknowledged his patients in Glace Bay will be struggling to find medical care, and that Yavari was motivated to lie by difficult circumstances.
     
    "His personal circumstances were extremely difficult, motivating him to misrepresent information in order to put his family into better circumstances," the committee noted, without elaborating. It added that Yavari has no other disciplinary history, co-operated with the investigation, and is supported by colleagues and the community.
     
    Yavari agreed to have his licence revoked, while the committee agreed he could be eligible to return to practice under certain conditions after at least four months.
     
    When he arrived in Glace Bay, Yavari told the Cape Breton Post he'd practised medicine in Iran for 12 years, and long hoped to be a doctor in Canada: "Being a doctor in Canada is a dream come true for me."
     
    He came to Nova Scotia through the Clinician Assessment for Practice Program (CAPP). Yavari told college investigators he was fearful his specialist experience in Dubai between 2006-2012 would disqualify him for the program.
     
    The college committee said doctors must not only practice with integrity but "also complete the application process with integrity."
     
    Last August, the college revoked the licence of a foreign-trained doctor in Parrsboro, N.S., after he was also caught lying on his CAPP application. Dr. Jalal Baghaee had hid his training and experience in pediatric medicine.
     
    As with Yavari, Baghaee was permitted to seek a return to practice after a waiting period.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Japan Gives Kudos To King Of Vancouver Sushi Kitchen, Chef Hidekazu Tojo

    Japan Gives Kudos To King Of Vancouver Sushi Kitchen, Chef Hidekazu Tojo
    So the 21-year-old chef flipped tradition inside-out, hiding the unfamiliar ingredients inside a coat of warm rice. The California roll was born.

    Japan Gives Kudos To King Of Vancouver Sushi Kitchen, Chef Hidekazu Tojo

    Appeal In Victoria Stafford Murder Set To Be Heard Oct. 24

    Appeal In Victoria Stafford Murder Set To Be Heard Oct. 24
    TORONTO — The man convicted of killing eight-year-old Victoria Stafford seven years ago is asking for a new trial, arguing there was too much weight given to the testimony of the "unsavoury" main witness.

    Appeal In Victoria Stafford Murder Set To Be Heard Oct. 24

    PM Justin Trudeau Announces $460 Million New Infrastructure Agreement With B.C.

    PM Justin Trudeau Announces $460 Million New Infrastructure Agreement With B.C.
    The Government of Canada remains committed to making significant investments in infrastructure that will improve our public transit systems, strengthen Canadian communities, and help grow the economy.

    PM Justin Trudeau Announces $460 Million New Infrastructure Agreement With B.C.

    Veterans Lawsuit Heading Back To Court After Settlement Deadline Passes

    VANCOUVER — A missed procedural deadline has set off a domino effect in a long-running court case about compensation for severely disabled veterans.

    Veterans Lawsuit Heading Back To Court After Settlement Deadline Passes

    2 Men Dead, One Rescued After Fishing Boat Capsizes Off Northern New Brunswick

    The RCMP says the incident occurred early Thursday morning off the Miller Brook wharf near Salmon Beach, about 11 kilometres from downtown Bathurst.

    2 Men Dead, One Rescued After Fishing Boat Capsizes Off Northern New Brunswick

    Senate Passes Assisted Dying Bill With Amendment To Delete Near-death Proviso

    Senate Passes Assisted Dying Bill With Amendment To Delete Near-death Proviso
    The bill, as amended over the past two weeks of lengthy debate in the upper house, passed late Wednesday by a vote of 64-12 with one abstention.

    Senate Passes Assisted Dying Bill With Amendment To Delete Near-death Proviso