Doctor who appeared on This Morning gave patient free botox in return for sex
Published date | 10 April 2024 |
Publication title | MyLondon (England) |
But the 42-year-old told a Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service MPTS hearing that he never had any physical sexual contact with Patient A who provided sex services via OnlyFans and webcams.
However an MPTS panel, sitting in Manchester, ruled that Dr Esho did have sexual intercourse with Patient A at his clinic in Newcastle upon Tyne in 2021 and administered botox free of charge.
It also ruled that he told her he "could get away with giving her botox in exchange for sexual services".
The panel also found that, at a consultation months earlier, he had stroked her hair and rubbed himself against her after he made inappropriate comments on the shape of her bottom.
A year earlier, at another consultation, he made similar remarks to Patient A, again rubbed himself against her, and allowed her to masturbate him, the panel determined.
Among the "inappropriate" Instagram messages sent to Patient A between July 2019 and February 2022 was an exchange in September 2019 when he said: "What you doing to me lol. Morning Glory. Bloody have me wanting the real thing. That's like every man's dream."
In November 2019 he posted: "Why you making me bulge lol. Send more, don't be sorry lol."
The following month he wrote "Lol loving the tongue" and "Ha free mls [millilitres] I'd need the whole booty and more".
Weeks later he told her: "My God having you for a night/every night is a dream but if we do it for mls I break the doctors code and I'd be a dead man x lol."
The panel ruled the conduct of the doctor, also known as Oluwafemi Esho, was sexually motivated but did not find Patient A to be vulnerable because of her profession.
In finding that Dr Esho administered free botox after sex in his clinic, tribunal chairwoman Debi Gould said: "The tribunal determined that Patient A's account was internally consistent in relation to key events.
"It also considered her evidence about sexual interactions was open, straightforward and not exaggerated.
"Moreover, the tribunal found Patient A's account consistent with the messaging.
"By contrast, the tribunal determined that Dr Esho's account did not accord with the contemporaneous messaging and his subsequent explanation for events contained new and additional material not set out in...
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