Dr. Barcza has agreed to leave the medical field in Ontario by May 31 and has promised not to seek practice in any area.
A local physician is preparing to retire following serious allegations of sexual abuse and misconduct.
According to documents from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO), Bradford West Gwillimbury’s Dr. Lawrence Zsigmond Barcza consented on March 10 to resign from practicing medicine in Ontario by May 31 and pledged not to apply for a license anywhere else.
In return, the CPSO plans to withdraw its Dec. 3 notice of hearing regarding claims of misconduct from the Ontario Physicians and Surgeons Discipline Tribunal.
The accusations state that between 2015 and 2024, Barcza behaved improperly with a patient referred to as “Patient A.”
This includes failing to keep appropriate boundaries, not obtaining informed consent for physical examinations, not providing sufficient privacy or proper gowning, kissing the patient’s fingers, touching the patient’s buttocks, making sexual comments, and revealing the patient’s personal health information to their father without permission.
The allegations have yet to be proven before the tribunal.
Barcza chose not to speak with us for this story.
To practice medicine in Ontario, doctors must be registered with the CPSO.
A representative from the college clarified that retirement does not equate to resignation from the CPSO since those are separate regulatory processes.
The college had previously looked into Barcza’s infection prevention practices.
Consequently, on March 27, 2024, he was instructed to cease reusing reusable medical equipment. He was directed that for all diagnostic and surgical procedures, only single-use disposable equipment should be utilized-this includes scalpels, forceps, scissors, speculums, clamps, and needle drivers among others.
Barcza graduated from Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry at Western University in 1973-the same year he reportedly began his practice in Bradford-and first received his independent practice certificate on June 25, 1974 according to CPSO records.
Over time, many of his patients became friends with him and his wife; hundreds gathered recently for a celebration marking his 50th year serving locals.
After more than fifty years in town, Barcza’s final day at his office located at 80 Holland St. E. is scheduled for April 28.
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