Surgeons will face charges of fraud

Surgeons will face charges of fraud


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Dr. Michael V. Elam, a Newport Beach cosmetic surgeon whose clientele includes entertainers Phyllis Diller and Jim Nabors, has been accused of incompetence, gross negligence and medical


insurance fraud in a complaint filed by the state. Elam’s former partner, Dr. Frederick Berkowitz, a cosmetic surgeon in Newport Beach, is accused of unprofessional conduct and insurance


fraud in the same complaint, which was filed March 22 by the state attorney general’s office on behalf of the California Board of Medical Quality Assurance. The board will hold a hearing


within the next year, Deputy Atty. Gen. Barry D. Ladendorf said. Possible Suspension Elam, a doctor since 1978, and Berkowitz, a doctor since 1957, face possible suspension or revocation of


their medical licenses if found guilty. Berkowitz was placed on three years’ probation in 1978 after the medical board found him guilty of aiding and abetting the unlicensed practice of


medicine. The state’s current complaint stems from a 1981 “tummy tuck” operation performed on Louise Byas, 42, of Dana Point. Byas contends that the two doctors left her with a disfiguring


abdominal scar. Elam and Berkowitz also are accused of submitting false medical claims in the Byas case. According to the state’s complaint, the doctors submitted insurance claims stating


that the tummy tuck, as well as subsequent surgeries on her nose and eyelids, were required to correct medical problems. All the surgeries, however, were performed for cosmetic purposes


only, state officials contend. Cosmetic surgery is not covered in health claims. $70,000 Settlement Last year, Byas won an out-of-court settlement of $70,000 in a medical malpractice suit


she brought against the two doctors in 1983. The doctors did not appeal the jury’s verdict. On Wednesday, both doctors proclaimed their innocence, saying the allegations were initiated by a


rival plastic surgeon who is jealous of their success. The doctors are members of the American Board of Cosmetic Surgery, and Elam is also the head of the American Society of Liposuction


Surgery. Dr. Robert Miner, a plastic surgeon who testified for Byas, is a member of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons, which contends that its board-certified


surgeons are best qualified to perform surgeries such as liposuction (fat removal). Miner filed the complaint with the state board in 1985 that resulted in the accusations against Elam and


Berkowitz, state records show. Miner could not be reached for comment Wednesday. Colby Smith, a Santa Ana board investigator assigned to the case, denied political rivalries prompted the


state’s case. ‘Took a Long Time’ “We’re concerned only with the quality of medical care,” Smith said. Berkowitz, 64, who worked with Elam until last year, discounted Byas as a disgruntled


patient who “took a heck of a long time” to make her accusations. But the 39-year-old Elam expressed anger and outrage at the charges. “I think I am being railroaded and shafted in this


whole thing,” Elam said in an interview at his office late Wednesday. “If I wasn’t a young, successful cosmetic surgeon, the other doctors in this community would leave me alone.” Elam added


that he should not be prosecuted for a case that happened seven years ago, especially since he and Berkowitz already have paid the woman restitution. “I went to trial already,” he said.


“Don’t you think it should be over?” ‘He’s the Best’ Comedienne Diller, 70, also rose to Elam’s defense. Diller said Elam performed cosmetic surgery on her nose, eyes and forehead and gave


her a chemical peel and two cheek implants in 1985 and 1986. “He’s the best,” Diller said from her Los Angeles home Wednesday. “What he’s done for me is miraculous. It has taken 70 years to


get to the way I want to look.” Elam has some less satisfied clients. He said that at least 13 have filed malpractice suits against him. But, Elam added, he did not consider the number


excessive considering that he treats more than 500 patients per year. MORE TO READ