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Fertility doc used own sperm to inseminate patients: medical regulator

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The committee ruled earlier Tuesday that Barwin, formerly a trusted infertility doctor who began working in the field in the 1970s, committed professional misconduct and failed to maintain the standards of the profession. (Pexels Photo)

TORONTO — An Ottawa fertility doctor irreversibly violated vulnerable patients by using his own sperm, or that of the wrong donor, to artificially inseminate several women over three decades, a discipline committee heard Tuesday.

Lawyers for the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario are asking the regulator’s discipline committee to revoke Dr. Bernard Norman Barwin’s medical licence, saying it is the only appropriate penalty for such a shocking abuse of trust.

“There is no precedent for the case you have before you at this college,” Carolyn Silver, a lawyer for the regulator, told the committee.

“Dr. Barwin’s patients and their families were the unsuspecting victims of his incomprehensible deception,” which saw him contradict their specific instructions without their knowledge or consent, she said.

His actions have traumatized entire families and left them forever altered, she said.

The committee ruled earlier Tuesday that Barwin, formerly a trusted infertility doctor who began working in the field in the 1970s, committed professional misconduct and failed to maintain the standards of the profession.

An uncontested statement of facts read before the committee laid out the cases of more than a dozen patients who say they suffered irreparable harm as a result of Barwin’s actions.

Some patients discovered their children were half-siblings, even though they had requested the same donor be used for both, the document said. Several men learned the children they had raised were not biologically theirs.

Rebecca Dixon, who waived a publication ban protecting her identity, said she discovered three years ago that Barwin — and not the man who raised her — was her biological father.

“In that moment, my life changed forever,” she told the committee, adding she felt her entire identity was thrown into question.

The news made her feel ashamed and “contaminated,” and strained her family, she said. Even now, Dixon said she continues to scan the crowds in Ottawa, looking for people who look like her and who may be her half-siblings.

A woman who can only be identified as Patient M said she learned recently that her teenage daughter was conceived using an unknown donor’s sperm rather than her husband’s. She has not yet broken the news to her daughter, worried the shock would be debilitating at such a “fragile” age, she said.

Patient M said Barwin went out of his way during the procedure to show her the vial of sperm with her husband’s name on it, knowing it contained material from another man.

“I still felt so violated, I felt dirty, almost as if I’d been raped,” she told the committee.

Barwin, 80, who did not attend the hearing, pleaded no contest to the allegations through his lawyer.

According to the statement of facts, an expert retained by the college to review Barwin’s case found it was unlikely the doctor’s use of his own sperm was accidental.

Barwin’s explanation that contamination must have occurred when he used his own sperm to calibrate a sperm counter is neither plausible nor believable, the expert said in the statement.

“This is a tragic situation in which a sea of avoidable harm was done,” the expert said.

Barwin had previously been disciplined for artificially inseminating several women with the wrong sperm, admitting to professional misconduct when he appeared before committee in 2013. At the time, Barwin said errors in his practice had left three patients with children whose biological fathers were not the ones they intended.

The committee then suspended him from practising medicine for two months, but Barwin gave up his licence the following year.

There was no evidence in that case that Barwin was the biological father of any of his patients’ children, said Silver, the college’s lawyer. Barwin intentionally concealed what he was doing, she said.

Barwin faced fresh allegations Tuesday of incompetence, failing to maintain the standard of practice of the profession and of engaging in dishonourable or unprofessional conduct.

If the committee decides to revoke Barwin’s licence, other medical regulators would be alerted should he apply to practise medicine elsewhere.

Barwin is also facing a proposed class-action lawsuit launched by several of his patients. The lawsuit alleges more than 50 children were conceived after their mothers were inseminated with the wrong sperm, including 11 with Barwin’s.

 

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