MOH probing LC Nursing Home founder over non-disclosure

MOH probing LC Nursing Home founder over non-disclosure


SINGAPORE – The Ministry of Health (MOH) is investigating whether LC Nursing Home founder Chia Yang Pong failed to disclose that disciplinary actions had been taken against him by the healthcare regulatory authorities, when he applied for a licence for LC Nursing Home.

Its spokesman said that under the Healthcare Services Act (HCSA), Chia is deemed a key appointment holder at LC Nursing Home, based on the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority’s (ACRA) records that list him as director of LC Nursing Home.

Under the HCSA, this role does not require medical expertise or technical oversight as a medical practitioner and Chia does not hold other appointments such as principal officer or clinical governance officer. MOH said it is “unable to comment further at this stage in the light of the ongoing investigations”.

Chia was struck off the medical register in 2004 in a high-profile case, when eight doctors from his Grace Polyclinic chain were punished for indiscriminately prescribing addictive sleeping pills.

The authorities inspected all branches in November 2002, and found that benzodiazepines had been improperly prescribed to 80 patients, without a proper record of their symptoms and condition.

That year, Chia, then the sole licensee of Grace Polyclinic, a chain of seven medical clinics, was brought to a disciplinary committee by the Singapore Medical Council (SMC).

It said that what Chia did “was essentially a systematic prescription of hypnotic drugs to the patients” and accused him of “freely dispensing the hypnotic drugs… without any regard to their medical conditions, health, interest or the harm that might come to them”. It also took him to task for his “lack of control” regarding the way the locums at his seven clinics treated patients.




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