
CPSO v Luchkiw: The Duty to Cooperate with a College Investigation
A family physician refused to cooperate with multiple CPSO investigations during the pandemic. The OPSDT held that the refusal was itself professional misconduct.
Representing Victims of Medical Malpractice Across Ontario
Discipline decisions are the published reasons of regulatory tribunals that adjudicate professional misconduct and incompetence allegations against Ontario regulated health professionals. Posts in this category analyze decisions of the Ontario Physicians and Surgeons Discipline Tribunal (OPSDT) and, where relevant, decisions of the discipline bodies of other Ontario health colleges, including the College of Nurses of Ontario.
Discipline proceedings are regulatory rather than civil. They do not provide compensation to patients who have been harmed by negligent care. They focus instead on whether the registrant should continue in practice, whether their practice should be restricted, and whether public protection requires sanctions ranging from caution and remediation to suspension or revocation of the certificate of registration. The framework is set out in the Health Professions Procedural Code (Schedule 2 to the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991) and in the profession-specific acts and regulations.
For patients considering a civil claim, discipline outcomes can be a useful source of information about a practitioner’s history and the regulator’s view of the standard of practice. For lawyers and researchers, discipline decisions are an important parallel jurisprudence to civil case law on standard of care and professional conduct.
Posts in this category analyze recent discipline outcomes, with attention to the underlying clinical or non-clinical conduct, the regulatory provisions engaged, the penalty imposed, and any judicial review or appeal that followed.

A family physician refused to cooperate with multiple CPSO investigations during the pandemic. The OPSDT held that the refusal was itself professional misconduct.

A clinical immunologist crossed professional boundaries with a 30-year patient and tried to procure a false alibi during the CPSO investigation that followed.
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