NAVI MUMBAI: Working on a complaint from the medical officer of Panvel Municipal Corporation from a Bogus Physician working in a private Clinic at Kharghar, the Kharghar Authorities has on Saturday Detained the accused Rohit Yadav (27), a resident of Koparkhairane.
Old inspector Shatrughna Mali of all Kharghar police station advised the accused Rohit Yadav was operating since Resident Medical Officer (RMO) in Kharghar Multi-speciality Hospital in business 15, Kharghar, by which he had been healing patients by prescribing medications.
“Acting on a tip off, we drifted Yadav on Saturday about 12.15 am, since he had been at night duty.
We’d sent a decoy individual Vikas Tirgul and a police opinion Sharad Singh.
Tirgul faked to be experiencing stomach pain and fulfilled Yadav from the casualty area.
Yadav recognized Tirgul and advised he had to have admitted in hospital and passed over a prescription of shots to Sharad Singh, to be attracted from clinical shop.
Tirgul alarmed the civic medical group waiting beyond the hospital and they entered the casualty area.
The medical staff Dr Bhaktaraj Bhoite asked Yadav regarding the treatment that he was giving into the individual Tirgul and discovered that Yadav had prescribed him injections.
Dr Bhoite advised Yadav to demonstrate his legitimate medical eligibility certificate in the medical council of India.
However, Yadav responded that he didn’t possess it.
Dr Bboite asked with the hospital nursing staff and patients also discovered that Yadav had prescribed medications to five patients diagnosed in the clinic.
Thus, we arrested Yadav and escorted him to Kharghar police channel ” He stated,”Further inquiry revealed in 2019, Yadav had been detained by Shivaji Nagar authorities after he had been discovered running a practice at the slum area and had been treating patients with no valid physician’s degree certification from physician council of India.
He was subsequently reserved under part 420, 315, 511 and 34 of the IPC and Department 33 and 36 of Maharashtra Medical Practitioners Act, 1961.
Subsequently, Yadav was released on bond.
Afterward, Yadav continued to indulge from the criminal action of posing as physician and treating patients in Kharghar Multi-speciality hospital, in which he’d joined as RMO approximately 2 weeks ago.
Hence, we’ve reserved Yadav for adulterous and try to commit offence under Sections 420 and 511 of the IPC respectively alongside Section 33 of Maharashtra Medical Practitioners Act, 1961 for Prohibition of Medical Practice by individuals not enrolled and consequently inducing threat to life of individuals by supporting them by prescribing medications without physician’s qualification despite knowing he was discharged on bond after urinating in a criminal action.
Yadav was remanded in police custody until June 22.”