No ScamNo Scam
    What's Hot

    Troy-based Flagstar Bank acquired by New York bank, will keep name

    December 8, 2022

    Los Angeles prosecutor drops charges against CEO of East Lansing firm

    December 8, 2022

    Man Armed With Ax, Sword Enters New York Times To Meet With Political Section

    December 8, 2022

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • About us
    • Mission
    • Wall of Shame
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    No ScamNo Scam
    REPORT SCAM
    • Home
    • Finance
    • Crypto
    • Forex
    • Medical
    • MLM
    No ScamNo Scam
    Home»Medical»Bungling Hungarian doctor, 70, who failed English test six times after he misread label on medication bottle and left four-year-old boy fighting for life is banned from treating patients
    Medical

    Bungling Hungarian doctor, 70, who failed English test six times after he misread label on medication bottle and left four-year-old boy fighting for life is banned from treating patients

    No ScamBy No ScamDecember 8, 2022Updated:December 8, 2022No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    A bungling Hungarian children’s doctor who failed six English tests after he misread a on a medication bottle and left a little boy fighting for life has been banned from treating patients.

    Dr Gyorgy Rakoczy, now 70, failed tests in listening reading, writing and speaking after previously being reprimanded for wrongly injecting the four-year-old boy with a potentially lethal amount of carbolic acid during a bungled hospital operation.

    Dr Rakoczy was reported to the General Medical Council over concerns about his command of the English language and was ordered to undergo retraining in 2019.

    But the consultant paediatrician, who worked at the Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital in Manchester, failed to pass the requisite tests and instead blamed the exams themselves for being ‘ageist’ towards him.

    At the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service in Manchester, Rakoczy, was suspended from practising medicine in the UK for a year after a review hearing last month.

    He says he no longer wants to work in British healthcare and has requested voluntary erasure from the GMC medical register.

    Rakoczy had originally been disciplined after a botched operation at the hospital in May 2009 in which the unnamed boy was injected with 80 per cent phenol – also known as carbolic acid.

    At the time Rakoczy – who was said to have a ‘limited command’ of the English language – was meant to use a five per cent concentration of the substance but mis-read the label.

    The boy had been admitted for examination under general anaesthetic after his parents suspected he had a haemorrhoid – which Dr Rakoczy treated.

    The consultant paediatrician, who worked at the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital in Manchester, failed to pass the requisite tests and instead blamed the exams themselves for being 'ageist' towards him

    The consultant paediatrician, who worked at the Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital in Manchester, failed to pass the requisite tests and instead blamed the exams themselves for being ‘ageist’ towards him.

    But he was left with ‘catastrophic’ internal injuries and needing a colostomy bag after Dr Rakoczy injected the child with 16 times the correct dose of carbolic acid and four times a potentially lethal dose.

    The highly-corrosive liquid burned away parts of the boy’s body leaving him with a hole down to the bone at the base of his spine.

    He has since required over 30 corrective operations, including the removal of a section of bowel and his parents – both healthcare professionals – said their son found it difficult going to the park and attending birthday parties.

    Rakoczy was allowed to carry on working at the hospital following the operation but was suspended for three months in 2012 for serious misconduct.

    Dr Racoczy’s history of issues with English

    • In 2009, Hungarian doctor Gyorgy Racoczy, now 70, misread a label for a carbolic acid bottle during surgery on a boy, 4, and injected a huge overdose, which left the boy  fighting for his life and disabled
    • In 2012 he was suspended from practising for three months over the incident in Manchester
    • In 2019 he was told by the GMC to pass English language tests to keep working as a doctor
    • In 2020 he admitted failing the tests six times but called them ‘ageist’
    • He has now been suspended for a year – but Dr Racoczy has said he will strike himself off the register 

    He underwent an assessment of his performance in 2016 and the following year took a test under the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) but scored 6.0, shy of the 7.5 pass mark.

    The 2019 tribunal was told a team of assessors said there were ‘issues with his command of English’ and ‘had difficulties with the use of it’ with one saying she ‘struggled to understand Rakcozy at times’.

    But hospital colleagues said whilst the surgeon’s English was ‘not perfect’ it had ‘improved considerably’ and he was able to discuss matters and participate in team meetings. A patient also came forward to say the doctor would ‘go beyond the call of duty’ and added that she would be happy for him to ‘perform surgery on her child tomorrow.’

    In 2020 Rakoczy took a Occupational English Test (OET) but only scored an average of 327.5 against the requirement of 350 and was ordered to work under supervision for another year. At a third review hearing in last year, it emerged he had not attempted to complete another test since and he was suspended for 12 months.

    At the latest hearing Rakoczy argued the tests were ‘discriminatory’ against people over the age of 60 and said he had lodged an appeal to the High Court on behalf of ‘other doctors in the UK.’

    But Ms Anam Khan counsel for the GMC said: ‘The doctor has again done nothing to engage with the expectations of him to seek to remediate his impairment by improving his English language.

    ‘The results of such a test are a key factor in deciding if a doctor is impaired because they lack the necessary knowledge of English. Dr Rakoczy has failed to discharge the responsibility that rests upon him to show why he ought to be allowed to return to unrestricted practice.’

    She added: ‘Dr Rakoczy was previously under conditional registration, imposed in both 2019 and 2020, and he had failed sufficiently to engage with the conditions and undergo an appropriate English language test. He has not responded to remediation and has limited insight. It is not safe for Dr Rakoczy to return to unrestricted practice.’

    MPTS chairman Damian Cooper said: ‘In focusing on the age discrimination matter rather than undertaking either the IELTS or OET Test demonstrated a lack of insight by Dr Rakoczy.’

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    No Scam
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Troy-based Flagstar Bank acquired by New York bank, will keep name

    December 8, 2022

    A doctor who lost 100 pounds shared 4 weight loss tips that worked for her

    December 8, 2022

    Louisville doctor encouraged by clinical trials of new drug to treat Alzheimer’s

    December 8, 2022
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Woman claims doctor sexually assaulted her, exercised extreme control over diet regime

    December 8, 2022

    A doctor who lost 100 pounds shared 4 weight loss tips that worked for her

    December 8, 2022

    11 more women accuse dead Florida doctor of criminal and suspicious activity; two sue his business

    December 7, 2022

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest sports news from SportsSite about soccer, football and tennis.

    Advertisement
    Demo
    Editors Picks

    Los Angeles prosecutor drops charges against CEO of East Lansing firm

    December 8, 2022

    Coinbase clarifies bug bounty policy in response to Uber extortion verdict

    December 8, 2022

    Founder of FTX Sam Bankman-Fried faces Federal inquiry

    December 8, 2022

    The Blockchain Trilemma – Can It Be Solved?

    December 8, 2022
    Top Reviews

    A doctor who lost 100 pounds shared 4 weight loss tips that worked for her

    By No Scam

    Woman claims doctor sexually assaulted her, exercised extreme control over diet regime

    By No Scam

    11 more women accuse dead Florida doctor of criminal and suspicious activity; two sue his business

    By No Scam
    Advertisement
    Demo
    No Scam
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube BlogLovin
    • Home
    • Guidelines
    • Get In Touch
    © 2023 No Scam. Designed by The Accountability Project.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.