Geoffrey Paul Doherty

Ontario – Ottawa

Radiology, Diagnostic

Claim your profile

Rate now

  [ 1.25 ] – extremely bad Voters 1   Comments 1

Details

Radiology, Diagnostic

active

76381

male

9

Fluent in English, French

Hospital privileges:
Ottawa Hospital,General Site (Ottawa)


Ottawa Hospital,Riverside Site (Ottawa)


Winchester District Memorial Hospital (Winchester)

Registered as Independent Practice (from 30 Jun 2006)

Specialty Diagnostic Radiology (30 Jun 2006)

Independent Practice (from 30 Jun 2006)
Registered on 01 Jul 2001
Graduated at University of Ottawa in 2001

Specialty Diagnostic Radiology (30 Jun 2006)

Hospital privileges:
Ottawa Hospital,General Site (Ottawa)


Ottawa Hospital,Riverside Site (Ottawa)


Winchester District Memorial Hospital (Winchester)

Postgraduate Training:
PostGrad Yr 1 at University of Ottawa - Diagnostic Radiology (01 Jul 2001-30 Jun 2002)
PostGrad Yr 2 at University of Ottawa - Diagnostic Radiology (01 Jul 2002-30 Jun 2003)
PostGrad Yr 3 at University of Ottawa - Diagnostic Radiology (01 Jul 2003-30 Jun 2004)
PostGrad Yr 4 at University of Ottawa - Diagnostic Radiology (01 Jul 2004-30 Jun 2005)
PostGrad Yr 5 at University of Ottawa - Diagnostic Radiology (01 Jul 2005-30 Jun 2006)

No associations

ServiceRating

Find and rate Canadian professionals

Search ServiceRating.ca for Canadian medical doctors and medical offices. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Geoffrey Paul Doherty has received 1 rating(s) and 1 review(s), resulting in an average rating of 1.25 on a scale from 1 to 5. The overall rating for this medical doctor is extremely bad.

If you have personal experience with Geoffrey Paul Doherty, we encourage you to share that experience with our ServiceRating.ca community. Your opinion is very important and Geoffrey Paul Doherty will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

Anonymous visitor

He refused to give an MRI to a patient with extensive kidney damage, ordering a CT instead. The contrast dye used in the CT would "minimize" damage to kidneys. Until there is a contrast dye that will completely eliminate damage to kidneys, would it not make sense to give patients with already damaged kidneys an MRI instead? The patient has had many CT scans in the past and an MRI was ordered anyway as the CT was too difficult to read. Did not listen to reason, this Doctor, even when an Oncologist explained the situation very clearly.

Was this review helpful to you?

Quality of Service
Knowledge
Helpfulness
Reliability

0     0    


     

Profile ID: SRCA-MDS-P-49460

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.