• About Us
  • Subscription
  • Contact Us
Monday, March 9, 2026
  • Login
Iran Times
  • Home
  • What’s the News
    • All
    • baygani
    Army Says It Makes Some Officers UN Peacekeepers

    Army Says It Makes Some Officers UN Peacekeepers

    Iran May Curry Favor With Egypt By Axing Street Name

    Iran May Curry Favor With Egypt By Axing Street Name

    Regime Barks Loudly At Dog Owners

    Regime Barks Loudly At Dog Owners

    Campaign To Rid Iran of Afghans Moves Into Trumpian High Gear

    Campaign To Rid Iran of Afghans Moves Into Trumpian High Gear

    Russia, China Interfere To Stunt Iran Nuclear Plan

    Russia, China Interfere To Stunt Iran Nuclear Plan

    Regime Hangs Convicted Killer of 7 in 2022 Protests

    Regime Hangs Convicted Killer of 7 in 2022 Protests

    Trump Kicks Trio Off Iran Issues For Being Too Pro-Israel

    Trump Kicks Trio Off Iran Issues For Being Too Pro-Israel

    Omid The Siberian Crane May Have Died

    Omid The Siberian Crane May Have Died

    Israel Built Drones In A Factory Set Near Tehran

    Israel Built Drones In A Factory Set Near Tehran

  • Diaspora
  • Economy
    Economist Says Biggest Problem For Iranian Economy is State Controls

    Economist Says Biggest Problem For Iranian Economy is State Controls

    US Stops Turkmen Gas Crossing Iran For Iraq

    US Stops Turkmen Gas Crossing Iran For Iraq

    For Umpteenth Time, Auto Privatization Again Killed

    For Umpteenth Time, Auto Privatization Again Killed

    China Oil Buy Drops, But Remains High

    China Oil Buy Drops, But Remains High

    Gov’t Ends Ban Importing Goods Made In Iran

    Minimum Wage is Boosted 45%

    Banks Must Keep More Money On Hand

    Banks Must Keep More Money On Hand

    Russian Says Iran Watermelons Unsafe

    Russian Says Iran Watermelons Unsafe

    Iran Not To Be Self-Sufficient In Wheat This Year

    Iran Not To Be Self-Sufficient In Wheat This Year

  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest
    Hell Comes To A Pasdar Base North of Tehran

    Hell Comes To A Pasdar Base North of Tehran

    US Mail To Iran Is Suspended

    President Takes Time Off For Surgery

    President Takes Time Off For Surgery

    After Month Of Talks, Trump Decides He Wants No Enrichment

    The Lights Are Going Out All Over Iran

    Drone Attack That Killed 3 US Troops in Jordan Could Have Been Foiled

    Iranian-Canadians Reportedly Turned Away at US Border

    Iranian-Americans: an Account of Integration and Achievement

    Jamshid Myth

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • What’s the News
    • All
    • baygani
    Army Says It Makes Some Officers UN Peacekeepers

    Army Says It Makes Some Officers UN Peacekeepers

    Iran May Curry Favor With Egypt By Axing Street Name

    Iran May Curry Favor With Egypt By Axing Street Name

    Regime Barks Loudly At Dog Owners

    Regime Barks Loudly At Dog Owners

    Campaign To Rid Iran of Afghans Moves Into Trumpian High Gear

    Campaign To Rid Iran of Afghans Moves Into Trumpian High Gear

    Russia, China Interfere To Stunt Iran Nuclear Plan

    Russia, China Interfere To Stunt Iran Nuclear Plan

    Regime Hangs Convicted Killer of 7 in 2022 Protests

    Regime Hangs Convicted Killer of 7 in 2022 Protests

    Trump Kicks Trio Off Iran Issues For Being Too Pro-Israel

    Trump Kicks Trio Off Iran Issues For Being Too Pro-Israel

    Omid The Siberian Crane May Have Died

    Omid The Siberian Crane May Have Died

    Israel Built Drones In A Factory Set Near Tehran

    Israel Built Drones In A Factory Set Near Tehran

  • Diaspora
  • Economy
    Economist Says Biggest Problem For Iranian Economy is State Controls

    Economist Says Biggest Problem For Iranian Economy is State Controls

    US Stops Turkmen Gas Crossing Iran For Iraq

    US Stops Turkmen Gas Crossing Iran For Iraq

    For Umpteenth Time, Auto Privatization Again Killed

    For Umpteenth Time, Auto Privatization Again Killed

    China Oil Buy Drops, But Remains High

    China Oil Buy Drops, But Remains High

    Gov’t Ends Ban Importing Goods Made In Iran

    Minimum Wage is Boosted 45%

    Banks Must Keep More Money On Hand

    Banks Must Keep More Money On Hand

    Russian Says Iran Watermelons Unsafe

    Russian Says Iran Watermelons Unsafe

    Iran Not To Be Self-Sufficient In Wheat This Year

    Iran Not To Be Self-Sufficient In Wheat This Year

  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest
    Hell Comes To A Pasdar Base North of Tehran

    Hell Comes To A Pasdar Base North of Tehran

    US Mail To Iran Is Suspended

    President Takes Time Off For Surgery

    President Takes Time Off For Surgery

    After Month Of Talks, Trump Decides He Wants No Enrichment

    The Lights Are Going Out All Over Iran

    Drone Attack That Killed 3 US Troops in Jordan Could Have Been Foiled

    Iranian-Canadians Reportedly Turned Away at US Border

    Iranian-Americans: an Account of Integration and Achievement

    Jamshid Myth

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
No Result
View All Result
Iran Times
No Result
View All Result

Octomom doc awaits verdict

 implanting an excessive number of embryos in the woman dubbed “Octomom” ended last week and a decision is now pending on whether he can keep his California medical license. During the November 18 closing hearing in Los Angeles, State Deputy Attorney General Judith Alvarado said Michael Kamrava’s poor decision-making is a danger to his patients and lobbied for his medical license to be revoked. She said he conducted fertility experiments on unknowing patients and wrongly gave in to the demands of Nadya Suleman, Octomom, by implanting 12 embryos inside her. Kamrava told the panel he and the now 35-year-old mother first met in 1997, when she came to him with the goal of giving birth to 10 kids. “On average, it was more than others want, however I didn’t make any judgment on that; that’s a personal decision,” Kamrava said, adding that Suleman had already been taking hormones to increase her chances for becoming pregnant when they first met. Kamrava told the panel that Suleman first underwent artificial insemination under his care, but the procedure didn’t take. In less than eight years, Kamrava repeatedly performed in vitro fertilization for Suleman, implanting her with 60 fresh embryos resulting in a total of 14 children. Kamrava said he implanted many embryos for each pregnancy, but his goal was always to have single-child pregnancies. In her argument to have Kamrava’s license revoked, Alvarado argued that the Iranian- American “deliberately” ignored standard medical practices. “This is not a situation of not knowing better, but rather of deliberately ignoring the standards of care,” Alvarado said. “He chose to engage in an unsafe pattern of practice that spanned over a number of years,” she said. But defending attorney Henry Fenton said his client, with 30 years of experience in the field, was faced with a tough decision when Suleman didn’t allow him to freeze or destroy her embryos. According to the defense, Suleman demanded having all 12 embryos implanted in-side of her and then reportedly failed to come in for any fetal reduction procedures. During the hearing, Kamrava testified that he attempted to contact Suleman to follow up after the procedure, and that he only learned of the record-setting multiple birth after the octuplets had already been delivered. Kamrava offered an emotional apology for implanting Suleman with so many embryos— six times the norm for a woman her age—but said he felt he didn’t have a choice. During his testimony last week, Kamrava also claimed that his patient knew she was part of a study on fertility methods because she volunteered for it. Kamrava said, “She heard about it, we discussed it with her and she volunteered.” Alvarado, however, said Suleman had not signed any forms acknowledging that she was involved in an experiment and asserted that Suleman could not have known she was volunteering to become a “human guinea pig.” According to federal regulation, patients must give their consent before being involved in medical studies. Although Suleman, whose father is Iraqi, is his most famous client, Kamrava is also accused of other questionable practices relating to in vitro fertilization. In one case, Kamrava is accused of implanting seven embryos in a 48-year-old woman, resulting in quadruplets, with one fetus dying before birth. In another case, Kamrava is said to have gone ahead with in vitro fertilization when he should have waited for a patient to be screened for cancer. She was later diagnosed with stage-three cancer and had to have her uterus and ovaries removed before undergoing chemotherapy. “I’m sorry for what happened,” Kamrava said fighting back tears during his emotional testimony. “When I look back at it, I wish I had never done it and it will never happen again.” The American Society of Reproductive Medicine expelled Kamrava in September, saying his behavior was detrimental to the medical industry. Judge Daniel Juarez now has 60 days to draft an opinion on Kamrava’s license to submit to the Medical Board of California for consideration. The board then has 90 days to make a decision on whether or not Kamrava can keep his medical license and continue practicing medicine in the state.

by Grace Nasri

Previous Post

Gasoline subsidy holds for another month

Next Post

Britain sends gambling addict off to jail

Related Posts

Diaspora

Iranian-Canadians Said Barred By Trump At Border

Diaspora

Iran National Admits Extorting American Cities

Quebec Health Insurance Not Available For Iranian
Diaspora

Quebec Health Insurance Not Available For Iranian

Next Post

Britain sends gambling addict off to jail

Cabbie killer gets life

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
  • Culture
  • Economy
Call us: +1 (202)-659-9868

© 1970-2025 Iran Times - ‬An‭ ‬Independent‭ ‬Newspaper

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • What’s the News
  • Diaspora
  • Economy
  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription

© 1970-2025 Iran Times - ‬An‭ ‬Independent‭ ‬Newspaper

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
Go to mobile version