Dati's gynaecologist risks being struck off medical register over 'delivery article'.Byline: ANI London, May 17 (ANI): The gynaecologist who spilled the beans about getting controversial French justice minister Rachida Dati back to office in five days after delivering her baby by C-section risks being struck off the medical register for revealing secrets. French doctor Claude Debache, 57, will be summoned by a medical council to explain an article he wrote in a magazine about a delivery technique which accelerates postnatal postnatal /post·na·tal/ (-na´t'l) occurring after birth, with reference to the newborn. post·na·tal adj. Of or occurring after birth, especially in the period immediately after birth. recovery and helped Dati, 43, return to work in record time, reports The Times. Following the birth of Zohra, Dati came under the media glare because she refused to name the father and was struggling at the time to persuade President Nicolas Sarkozy not to sack her after criticism of her performance at work. While flatteringly flat·ter 1 v. flat·tered, flat·ter·ing, flat·ters v.tr. 1. To compliment excessively and often insincerely, especially in order to win favor. 2. portraying Dati in Paris Match Paris Match is a French weekly magazine. It's best known for the frequent use of paparazzi photographs. The magazine also covers major national and international news along with celebrity features. Paris Match was founded in 1949 by the industrialist Jean Prouvost. magazine, her gynaecologist defended her against charges of exploiting the birth for publicity. "The night before her departure she asked me if there was a secret way out of the clinic," he wrote, claiming that Dati wanted to avoid the scrum An agile software development methodology developed by Ken Schwaber and Jeff Sutherland in the mid-1990s. Scrum is based on a "Sprint," which is a 30-day period for delivering a working part of the system. of photographers. "Alas, there was not," he went on. "She regretted it. But made no reproach re·proach tr.v. re·proached, re·proach·ing, re·proach·es 1. To express disapproval of, criticism of, or disappointment in (someone). See Synonyms at admonish. 2. To bring shame upon; disgrace. n. ." In his defence, he said there was nothing unusual about returning to work five days after giving birth by caesarean caesarean n. Variant of cesarean. caesarean cesarean. . Dati benefited from a caesarean technique that avoids cutting tissue and muscle as much as possible - they are parted manually instead, the expert added. "That way the postnatal recovery is much quicker . . . and less painful," he wrote. "I always encourage women to return to their normal life as quickly as possible if that is their wish and if their health and the baby's permits it. That was Rachida Dati's case," the doctor said. Irhne Kahn-Bensaude, president of the Parisian medical council, has accused him of violating the code of practice by publicising his services. "It is a phenomenal advertisement for him," she said. She also accused him of violating the Hippocratic oath Hippocratic oath ethical code of medicine. [Western Culture: EB, 11: 827] See : Medicine guaranteeing doctor-patient confidentiality. "Everybody knows that Rachida Dati had a caesarean, but her gynaecologist has no right to talk about it," she said, adding that he would be summoned this week to a hearing. (ANI) Copyright 2009 Asian News International The Asian News International (ANI) agency provides multimedia news to China and 50 bureaus in India. It covers virtually all of South Asia since its foundation and presently claims, on its official website, to be the leading South Asia-wide news agency. (ANI) - All Rights Reserved. Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company |
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