(Photo courtesy of the Iowa Board of Nursing)
An Iowa-licensed nurse accused of sexually assaulting multiple patients in Texas has agreed to surrender his license.
On Jan. 16, 2025, the Iowa Board of Nursing agreed to accept Caleb Greer’s voluntary surrender of his nursing license. Board documents indicate Greer was issued a warning and advised that he will not be able to apply for reinstatement for one year.
The Iowa board’s actions follow a November 2024 decision by the Texas Board of Nursing, which accepted Greer’s surrender of his license to practice in that state as an advanced practice registered nurse.
Texas board documents indicate that before and after Greer completed a family nurse practitioner program at Sioux City’s Morningside College in 2019, he worked for several different entities in Iowa, Colorado and Texas — most recently as the owner of Dasein Health in West Lake Hills, Texas.
The Texas board alleged that in July 2019, while treating a female patient identified as “N.M.,” Greer told the woman she was “MILFy,” began to massage her, and then kissed her on the lips and fondled her breasts and genitals.
The board also alleged that in October 2020, Greer was seeing patient “Y.C.” when he “French kissed her, touched her private parts, took off his pants, and placed his penis in (her) hand.” When the patient later telephoned Greer to ask why he had sexually assaulted her, Greer allegedly replied, “Because you’re blocked sexually.”
The Texas board also alleged that in 2022 and 2023, while running the Dasein Health clinic, Greer massaged the thighs of a female patient, “E.H,” and then kissed her and fondled her while admitting that his “carnal desire took over” and he had “lost control.” The board alleges that in subsequent emails sent to the woman, Greer stated, “I realize that I did not have your consent and that, yes, what I did was assault.”
According to the Texas board, Greer was arrested in January 2024 on a charge of felony sexual assault related to his conduct with E.H. He later underwent a sexual offender psychological evaluation that allegedly concluded he posed an “imminent and immediate risk of harm to the public.”
The criminal case is still pending, according to board records.
In addition to disciplinary charges of violating patient boundaries, the Texas board also charged Greer with multiple instances of improperly administering medications and improperly performing ketamine therapy on patients. Board documents indicate Greer denied all of the allegations, describing them as a “gross exaggeration” of what had actually transpired.
He subsequently agreed to surrender his Texas nursing license.