WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg doctor who once traded sex for drugs is being disciplined again.
Dr. Randy Raymond Allan has been given a six-month license suspension for misleading investigators. He was being looked into for professional misconduct for allowing a nurse practitioner to use his billing number for patients he didn’t see.
In the summer of 2009, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba said Allan had moved to Kenora, Ont. to work, but was still billing Manitoba Health for patients the nurse practitioner was seeing.
During the investigation from June 2013 to April 2014, the college said Allan mislead investigators by lying about knowing the nurse practitioner was using his billing number.
The college said investigators found cheques that Allan wrote to the nurse practitioner.
In addition to a six-month license suspension, Allan also has to pay the college $11,026.
This isn’t the first time Allan has been disciplined.
RELATED: Winnipeg doctor admits to trading prescriptions for sex
Between 2009 and 2010, Allan traded drugs for sex with two women he met at a massage parlour.
Both women admitted to being addicted to the powerful painkiller, OxyContin.
Despite one of the women asking for help for her addiction, Allan prescribed her up to 90 pills in a three-month period in exchange for sex.
There were no records kept of the prescriptions and he billed Manitoba Health for house calls he made to the women’s homes, which were personal not professional.
Allan was given an 18-month suspension.
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