A fertility doctor who moved into transgender care after being disciplined is no longer able to practise medicine.
Dr. James Scott Bradley Martin was found incompetent and to have committed professional misconduct on Sept. 25 by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario.
As a result, Martin was fined $6,000 to cover the collegeās costs in his discipline case. He gave up his medical licence and agreed never to apply for a new one in Ontario or anywhere else.
According to documents made public on Oct. 4, the collegeās investigation stemmed from two complaints against the London, Ont.-based doctor. Both complaints were made in 2016, when Martin was seeing about 30 patients a week at a clinic focused on transgender care and hormone replacement therapy.
The first complaint stemmed from Martinās treatment of an adolescent female-to-male transgender patient seeking a mastectomy.
According to the college, Martin ālacked judgmentā by prescribing the young patient cross-sex hormones during their first visit, without giving them more time to think about the benefits and risks of the treatment and without first assessing the patientās mental health.
A lack of mental health awareness was also cited in the second complaint, for which an investigator found that Martin had again prescribed hormones on a patientās first visit. The investigator also found the appointmentās 30-minute time window āconcerningā as it suggested the patient may not have had enough time to provide informed consent to the therapy Martin had prescribed.
Anxiety and depression, which commonly occur in young people seeking gender reassignment surgery, were never specifically discussed with either patient, the college said.
āDr. Martinās conduct exposed patients to harm or injury, based primarily on Dr. Martinās initiation of cross-sex hormones at the first visit, as well as Dr. Martinās lack of understanding regarding the need to assess an adolescent patientās mental health,ā the college wrote in hearing notes posted to Martinās .
Martin had been a fertility doctor until after he was disciplined by the college in 2014 for failing to maintain the standards of the profession. He admitted to giving some patients āan excessive number of intrauterine inseminationā treatment cycles, delaying the patients from moving on to more effective procedures, and failing to document discussions he claimed to have had with his patients about their treatment options.
At the time, the college suspended his licence to practise medicine for two months and barred him from accepting new fertility patients.
The college had also flagged issues around improper OHIP billing and lack of response to complaints from Martin.
He was ordered in 2016 to have a clinical supervisor for his work in transgender care. The supervisor reported issues with Martin failing to ask patients about mental health issues and prescribing hormones during initial visits, but said he had āno major concernsā about Martinās ability to continue his work.
Last year, as the collegeās investigation into Martinās care for young transgender patients was ongoing, Martin was ordered to stop providing transgender care to new patients under the age of 18. He was ordered to use a clinical supervisor for existing patients, and chose not to, leading to a subsequent order to stop caring for all patients under 18.
Martinās wife, Dr. Cathy Frank, was found incompetent by the college earlier this year after investigators found that she mistreated more than 20 of her patients, including one whose sole remaining ovary was removed by Martin without the patientās consent. Frank lost her medical licence for two years.
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