Friday, 22 January 2016

NHS Psychiatrist in the UK sacked for recommending TB Joshua's Emmanuel TV to patient

A NHS psychiatrist in the UK Dr Julius Awakame, 50, has been
sacked after he advised a patient to get help from TB Joshua's 24-
hour church TV channel, Emmanuel TV because she might be
possessed by demonic 'special forces'.
According to UK Daily Mail, Dr Julius recorded medical notes
diagnosing the woman as having a history of 'satanic ritual abuse'
and said her issues could not be addressed by regular treatment.
So instead he told her to watch Emmanuel TV, adding: 'neither
psychiatry not psychology would be able to help because there are
special forces at play.'
The woman - known as Patient A - claimed Awakame also told her to
get 'nice holy water' before 'switching off' during the consultation
at a health centre in Harwich, Essex.
When community psychiatric nurse Martin Rowe later quizzed
Awkame whether she she was possessed, the medic replied: 'She
may well be' and claimed she had been thrown out of her local
church due to her condition.
The doctor's employment with the North Essex Partnership
Foundation Trust was terminated the following month.
Today Awkame - who has since returned to his native Ghana - faced
being struck off after he was found guilty in his absence at a
medical tribunal of a number of misconduct charges.
The consultation took place on January 23 2014 when Awakame was
treating the vulnerable woman as an outpatient.
The hearing, in Manchester, was told he was made aware she had a
'Dissociative Identity' - a personality disorder - and a 'history of
previous satanic ritual abuse' before making a record of it in his
notes.
But Awakame, formerly of Ipswich, then told Patient A she had been
'initiated through satanic ritual' and wrote down a website address
for her to access.
He told her the TV station was 'specifically targeted for people who
experienced similar situations.'
And he said her problems 'could only be addressed by the church'
before he wrote down the name and suggested she write a book
about her experiences.
He also told Patient A he had watched the TV station and said
there were 'many people who had similar problems' to her.
The patient further claimed Awakame told her to ask the church to
send her some 'nice holy water' to help with her problems. She
later spoke to Mr Rowe about the encounter and the nurse quizzed
Awakame.
When the nurse told Awakame that Patient A thought she might be
'possessed' he replied: 'She may well be.'
The doctor also said he 'studied' the TV station 'for hours' and said
the woman's church had recognised she was possessed and had
thrown her out.
Speaking of her emotional state following the meeting, Patient A
said: 'I had pretty much switched off after hearing Dr Awakame tell
me that no psychiatrist or psychologist could help me as throughout
my childhood my parents had told me that no one would believe
me and no one would help me'.
Awakame was reported to a consultant psychiatrist at the Trust by
Mr Rowe the day after the consultation.
Following an investigation he was subsequently sacked and referred
to the General Medical Council.
Awakame, who worked in various hospitals in the NHS from 1997 to
2014, will be disciplined next month by the Medical Practitioners
Tribunal Service.
He is currently working as a lecturer in 'health informatics' in his
home country where he graduated in medicine in 1993

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