Get a load of this nutty letter from a doctor named Wayne Martz:
I was surprised and somewhat disappointed to read in this morning’s News Journal that the Delaware Board of Medical Practice lifted the license of Dr. Earl Bradley to practice medicine.
I’m sure every doctor in the region feels a deep sense of shame, regret and anger over the whole Earl Bradley episode, as he reflects discredit on the entire medical profession. However, there are two offenses here, and the usual way to handle this is to let the civil/criminal offense against children run its course and impose its punishment, and then the Board of Medical Practice steps in to consider what should be done about the improper practice of medicine.
The BMP is not set up to have a punitive function. Its function is to protect the public from the improper practice of medicine, and in this it has failed miserably.
A medical education is extremely expensive; far more than the cost of tuition, and Delaware, like every other state, invests millions every year in training its doctors.
By taking away his license, they deprive people of his services, the state’s return on its investment. His skills, such as they are, will fade rapidly. He could probably practice safely in a prison, and if sent to prison, he will probably be put to work in the health care system. From what I know of prisons, child molesters are not very popular there. It is possible some harm might come to him. A shame.
E. Wayne Martz, M.D., MBA, West Grove, Pa.
about the Bradley case:
"Medical Board Was Wrong to Revoke License of Pediatrician"
http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20100227/OPINION10/100226060
I was surprised and somewhat disappointed to read in this morning’s News Journal that the Delaware Board of Medical Practice lifted the license of Dr. Earl Bradley to practice medicine.
I’m sure every doctor in the region feels a deep sense of shame, regret and anger over the whole Earl Bradley episode, as he reflects discredit on the entire medical profession. However, there are two offenses here, and the usual way to handle this is to let the civil/criminal offense against children run its course and impose its punishment, and then the Board of Medical Practice steps in to consider what should be done about the improper practice of medicine.
The BMP is not set up to have a punitive function. Its function is to protect the public from the improper practice of medicine, and in this it has failed miserably.
A medical education is extremely expensive; far more than the cost of tuition, and Delaware, like every other state, invests millions every year in training its doctors.
By taking away his license, they deprive people of his services, the state’s return on its investment. His skills, such as they are, will fade rapidly. He could probably practice safely in a prison, and if sent to prison, he will probably be put to work in the health care system. From what I know of prisons, child molesters are not very popular there. It is possible some harm might come to him. A shame.
E. Wayne Martz, M.D., MBA, West Grove, Pa.
about the Bradley case:
"Medical Board Was Wrong to Revoke License of Pediatrician"
http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20100227/OPINION10/100226060