Nigerian doctor in the UK suspended for stealing from patient and nurse

A hospital doctor in Wolverhampton who stole money from a vulnerable patient and a colleague has been suspended from her profession for a year.

It comes after Dr Sandra Ndirika, a urology trainee at Royal Wolverhampton Hospital NHS Trust, admitted two counts of theft and seven of fraud by false representation at the cityโ€™s magistratesโ€™ court in 2023.

She received a suspended jail sentence of 32 weeks in January 2024.

Co-Op post

A Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MTPS) panel has now ruled her fitness to practise has been impaired after she cloned and took bank cards and used them to make purchases.

The second complainant was a nurse whose bank card Ndirika stole from her purse, in her handbag in the staff room, and used for an online food order.

The tribunal heard Ndirika had admitted the allegations when interviewed by police under caution and was later suspended from her job.

The doctor told the panel that, at the time of the offences, โ€œthere was no premeditation; her mind was in a โ€˜fogโ€™, and she acted without thought, only feeling shame afterwardsโ€.

The public record of the tribunalโ€™s determination, partially redacted, stated Ndirika โ€œcharacterised herself as still being at the beginning of her journey towards meaningful changeโ€ but โ€œfirmly anticipates being ready to return to work in the futureโ€.

She had been engaging in ongoing professional development to keep her clinical knowledge up to date, it said.

In determining a sanction, the tribunal found Ndirikaโ€™s offending breached professional standards and undermined trust in the medical profession.

โ€œThese were not isolated incidents but a pattern of behaviour where the doctor took advantage of her vulnerable patient and colleague, directly contravening the expectation that doctors must be trustworthy and honest,โ€ it stated.

In mitigation, the panel accepted she had shown remorse and attempted to apologise to complainants, which was declined.

However, it concluded the โ€œrisk of repetitionโ€ remained โ€œlikelyโ€ since she had not demonstrated sufficient understanding of the impact of her actions or taken steps towards โ€œgenuine remediationโ€.

It decided her fitness to practise was impaired by reason of her conviction and her registration was suspended for 12 months from 22 August.

A review hearing will be held before the end of the suspension period.

In a statement, The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trustโ€™s chief medical officer, Dr Brian McKaig, said: โ€œAs soon as we were made aware of the allegations, we suspended Dr Ndirika whilst investigations were carried out.โ€


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *