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Wednesday, 30 April, 2025
HomeMedico-LegalFake therapist fooled hundreds online until she died

Fake therapist fooled hundreds online until she died

Hundreds of Americans may have unknowingly received therapy from an untrained impostor who masqueraded as an online therapist, possibly for as long as two years, with the deception crumbling only when she died, according to US State Health Department records.

Peggy A Randolph, a social worker who was licensed in Florida and Tennessee and formerly worked for Brightside Health, a nationwide online therapy company, is accused of helping her wife impersonate her in online sessions, according to an investigation report from the Florida Department of Health.

The Florida report says the couple “defrauded” patients through a “co-ordinated effort”: as Randolph treated patients in person, her wife pretended to be her in telehealth sessions with Brightside patients.

KFF Health News reports that the deceit was discovered after the wife died last year and a patient realised they’d been talking to the wrong person, according to a Tennessee Department of Health settlement agreement.

Records from both states identify Randolph’s wife only by her initials, TR, but her full name is in her obituary: Tammy G Heath-Randolph.

Therapists are generally expected to have at least a master’s degree, but Randolph’s wife was “not licensed or trained to provide any sort of counselling services”, showed the Tennessee agreement.

“(Randolph) denies knowing that TR was using her Brightside Health Therapist Portal log-in credentials or treating clients under her account. However, (she) received compensation for the sessions conducted,” the agreement states.

The ruse has not been previously reported and its details and scope were only recently glimpsed in a few pages of public documents released by the state agencies.

The Tennessee settlement, released in May, states that Randolph was supposed to provide online therapy to “hundreds of clients” while working for Brightside Health from January 2021 to February 2023.

However, a Brightside internal investigation found it was actually Heath-Randolph who was “seeing all her patients and had been for a long time”, according to the Florida investigation report.

Randolph declined to comment.

The Florida and Tennessee records say Randolph has since voluntarily surrendered her social worker’s licences in both states.

This resulted in the health departments dropping their investigations, which limited the case details and documents available in the public record.

Brightside’s internal investigation report has not been made public.

A company spokesperson said that as soon as they had learned of the allegations, they had audited their security, fired Randolph, and reported her to state authorities.

Brightside can’t say how many patients were seen by Randolph’s wife, “due to the nature of the incident and ongoing legal proceedings”, but the company had notified and refunded all “potentially impacted patients”.

“We’re extremely disappointed that a single provider was willing to violate the trust that Brightside and, most importantly, her patients, had placed in her.”

Brightside was also required to alert the US Department of Health and Human Services, which investigates data breaches that expose private medical information.

In this breach, an “unauthorised individual” accessed the info of 767 people, including Social Security numbers and diagnoses, according to the agency’s online database.

A Florida Department of Health spokesperson said a full investigation was not completed because Randolph surrendered her licence, which has the same effect as the state revoking it, but allowed her to keep “what dignity she had left”.

 

KFF Health News article – Fake Therapist Fooled Hundreds Online Until She Died, State Records Say (Open access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

Fake doctor arrested after swindling thousands

 

Bogus TikTok doctor charged by Gauteng Health

 

Bogus Zim doctor worked at hospital for 7 months undetected

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