Nearly 1/3 of Docs Wouldn't Report Impaired or Incompetent Colleague
Results from a study on physicians’ perceptions and behavior regarding their responsibility to report impaired or incompetent colleagues reveal that one in three physicians who know a colleague is impaired or incompetent would not report him or her to the proper authorities.
The authors of the study “Physicians' Perceptions, Preparedness for Reporting, and Experiences Related to Impaired and Incompetent Colleagues,” published in the July 14 issue of JAMA, concluded that although “physicians support the professional commitment to report all instances of impaired or incompetent colleagues in their medical practice to a relevant authority,” when faced with these situations, many do not report the behavior to the proper authorities.
According to the study, seventeen percent of the 1,891 physicians surveyed “had direct personal knowledge of a physician colleague who was incompetent to practice medicine in their hospital, group, or practice.” Two-thirds (67%) of these physicians reported this colleague “to the relevant authority,” meaning that nearly a full third of practicing physicians surveyed opted to ignore their colleagues’ dangerous behaviors. For the study, researchers distributed surveys to physicians practicing in anesthesiology, cardiology, family practice, general surgery, internal medicine, pediatrics, and psychiatry.
The study also found that “underrepresented minorities and graduates of non-US medical schools were less likely than their counterparts to report” dangerous behaviors, with physicians who work in hospitals or medical schools most likely to report an impaired or incompetent colleague. Reasons given for failure to report included the belief that “someone else was taking care of the problem” (19%), the belief that “nothing would happen as a result of the report” (15%), and “fear of retribution” (12%).
Sixty-four percent of surveyed physicians agreed that physicians always have a “professional commitment to report physicians who are significantly impaired or otherwise incompetent to practice. Nearly 70% of physicians said that they felt “prepared to effectively deal with impaired colleagues in their medical practice;” 64% stated that they were “prepared to deal with incompetent colleagues.”
In a press release from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), lead study author Catherine DesRoches, DrPh, Mongan Institute for Health Policy at MGH, said that “Our findings cast serious doubt on the ability of medicine to self-regulate with regard to impaired or incompetent physicians.” DesRoches also said that because physicians themselves “are the primary mechanism for detecting such colleagues, understanding their beliefs and experiences surrounding this issue is essential. This is clearly an area where the profession of medicine needs to be concerned.”
Co-author John A. Fromson, MD, associate director of Postgraduate Medical Education, MGH Psychiatry, said that the study “underscores the need for the medical profession to educate its members on their reporting obligations to ensure safe and competent care to patients.” According to Fromson, those obligations include “referring colleagues to physician health programs that can guide and monitor their recovery from substance use and mental disorders.’
In the same press release, senior author of the study Eric G. Campbell, PhD, research director for the Mongan Institute, said that these study results “imply that the current system of reporting is functionally inadequate.” Campbell stated that “many physicians are afraid to access [the reporting system] or believe that reporting will not be effective.” This clearly outlines the need for improvements to be made to the current system, including “helping physicians understand their professional responsibility to report impaired and incompetent colleagues, enhancing protections for reporting physicians and providing confidential feedback about outcomes,” said Campbell.
Matthew Wynia, of the Institute for Ethics at the AMA, in an editorial that appears in the same issue of JAMA as the study, wrote that “this research is proof that individual physicians cannot always be relied on to report colleagues who threaten quality of care.” A post on the Scientific American blog notes that Wynia’s editorial also points out that “although professional organizations and hospitals have a variety of systems to help detect potentially dangerous doctors—such as continued certification and performance monitoring programs—co-workers are generally considered the first line of defense.”
HCPLive wants to know:
Have you had direct, personal knowledge of a physician who was impaired or incompetent to practice medicine?
If so, did you report him/her to hospital/practice administrators, the state medical board, or another authority?
If you opted to not report your colleague to the authorities, what were your reasons for doing so? Is there an unwritten “code of silence” among physicians?
Should state medical boards, professional medical societies, and other institutions be doing more to educate physicians about their ethical responsibilities in these situations? Should the procedures for reporting colleagues’ dangerous behaviors be changed?
The authors of the study “Physicians' Perceptions, Preparedness for Reporting, and Experiences Related to Impaired and Incompetent Colleagues,” published in the July 14 issue of JAMA, concluded that although “physicians support the professional commitment to report all instances of impaired or incompetent colleagues in their medical practice to a relevant authority,” when faced with these situations, many do not report the behavior to the proper authorities.
According to the study, seventeen percent of the 1,891 physicians surveyed “had direct personal knowledge of a physician colleague who was incompetent to practice medicine in their hospital, group, or practice.” Two-thirds (67%) of these physicians reported this colleague “to the relevant authority,” meaning that nearly a full third of practicing physicians surveyed opted to ignore their colleagues’ dangerous behaviors. For the study, researchers distributed surveys to physicians practicing in anesthesiology, cardiology, family practice, general surgery, internal medicine, pediatrics, and psychiatry.
The study also found that “underrepresented minorities and graduates of non-US medical schools were less likely than their counterparts to report” dangerous behaviors, with physicians who work in hospitals or medical schools most likely to report an impaired or incompetent colleague. Reasons given for failure to report included the belief that “someone else was taking care of the problem” (19%), the belief that “nothing would happen as a result of the report” (15%), and “fear of retribution” (12%).
Sixty-four percent of surveyed physicians agreed that physicians always have a “professional commitment to report physicians who are significantly impaired or otherwise incompetent to practice. Nearly 70% of physicians said that they felt “prepared to effectively deal with impaired colleagues in their medical practice;” 64% stated that they were “prepared to deal with incompetent colleagues.”
In a press release from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), lead study author Catherine DesRoches, DrPh, Mongan Institute for Health Policy at MGH, said that “Our findings cast serious doubt on the ability of medicine to self-regulate with regard to impaired or incompetent physicians.” DesRoches also said that because physicians themselves “are the primary mechanism for detecting such colleagues, understanding their beliefs and experiences surrounding this issue is essential. This is clearly an area where the profession of medicine needs to be concerned.”
Co-author John A. Fromson, MD, associate director of Postgraduate Medical Education, MGH Psychiatry, said that the study “underscores the need for the medical profession to educate its members on their reporting obligations to ensure safe and competent care to patients.” According to Fromson, those obligations include “referring colleagues to physician health programs that can guide and monitor their recovery from substance use and mental disorders.’
In the same press release, senior author of the study Eric G. Campbell, PhD, research director for the Mongan Institute, said that these study results “imply that the current system of reporting is functionally inadequate.” Campbell stated that “many physicians are afraid to access [the reporting system] or believe that reporting will not be effective.” This clearly outlines the need for improvements to be made to the current system, including “helping physicians understand their professional responsibility to report impaired and incompetent colleagues, enhancing protections for reporting physicians and providing confidential feedback about outcomes,” said Campbell.
Matthew Wynia, of the Institute for Ethics at the AMA, in an editorial that appears in the same issue of JAMA as the study, wrote that “this research is proof that individual physicians cannot always be relied on to report colleagues who threaten quality of care.” A post on the Scientific American blog notes that Wynia’s editorial also points out that “although professional organizations and hospitals have a variety of systems to help detect potentially dangerous doctors—such as continued certification and performance monitoring programs—co-workers are generally considered the first line of defense.”
HCPLive wants to know:
Have you had direct, personal knowledge of a physician who was impaired or incompetent to practice medicine?
If so, did you report him/her to hospital/practice administrators, the state medical board, or another authority?
If you opted to not report your colleague to the authorities, what were your reasons for doing so? Is there an unwritten “code of silence” among physicians?
Should state medical boards, professional medical societies, and other institutions be doing more to educate physicians about their ethical responsibilities in these situations? Should the procedures for reporting colleagues’ dangerous behaviors be changed?
Comment(s)
Your comments are valuable to us. Thank you.
Caryl Mussenden, MD
July 16th, 2010 - 10:28:11 AM
I used an anesthesiologist in my office for outpatient services. He was drug impaired and I found this out WHILE the patient was on the table!! I confronted the doctor and he admitted he had a problem, so I called the state medical society to find out how I could help him. The employee was wonderful and assured me that any help to him would be confidential and to encourage the doctor to call for help. The doctor indeed went into a treatment program through the medical society, got clean and returned to work. This was over 4 years ago and he has remained clean since then. Had the physician NOT admitted a problem, I would have reported him to the appropriate agency. Having a medical society that had a team in place to help was the best thing that could be available for these problems! Thanks for the work you have done in getting this article disseminated.
andrew king
July 16th, 2010 - 10:30:27 AM
I beleive that it is affirming that the large majority of doctors WILL report impairment.
There is no comparison between medicine and other professions and fields of endeavor. Im betting the report rate for law and the
judiciary is dismal.
I am concerned that the health policy wonks in their ivory towers are using this data to advocate structured reporting policy that could paradoxically make things worse!
There is no comparison between medicine and other professions and fields of endeavor. Im betting the report rate for law and the
judiciary is dismal.
I am concerned that the health policy wonks in their ivory towers are using this data to advocate structured reporting policy that could paradoxically make things worse!
Brian
July 16th, 2010 - 10:31:22 AM
I have, and I reported them. Of course I would do it again. My responsibility is to my patients and all patients, and to "at least do no harm". In addition, it helped my colleague get the treatment they needed. Streamlining reporting would be good, and education is always appropriate on ethical reporting responsibilities as professionals.
Edward Benjamin, MD
July 16th, 2010 - 10:35:50 AM
I have never personally known an impaired or incompetent physician. However, I do have some observations and recommendations.
The reason many medical societies have their own "Impaired physician committees" is to assist rather than punish an often ill and somewhat helpless individual. There is a serious attempt to evaluate the MD involved and offer help (if at all feasible) rather than "throwing him to the wolves" of bureaucratic administrative authorities. I believe that if the DesRoches study included only physicians who had the option to report to a SAFE HAVEN which then would take on the responsibility of making certain that the MD in question was "salvageable" and, if not, then reporting him or her to the authorities....The results would be MUCH different.
The reason many medical societies have their own "Impaired physician committees" is to assist rather than punish an often ill and somewhat helpless individual. There is a serious attempt to evaluate the MD involved and offer help (if at all feasible) rather than "throwing him to the wolves" of bureaucratic administrative authorities. I believe that if the DesRoches study included only physicians who had the option to report to a SAFE HAVEN which then would take on the responsibility of making certain that the MD in question was "salvageable" and, if not, then reporting him or her to the authorities....The results would be MUCH different.
John Hey MD
July 16th, 2010 - 11:24:30 AM
I have on three occasions reported impaired physicians and they were adequately treated. Since then there have been several physicians who are incompetant and dangerous. Nothing has been done. I no longer report to authorities since the system is corrupted and will be used against all physicians. I deal directly with the physician and his family. The risk of the system is too great and we basically are out of the loop. Govenment and the judiciary are corrupt and not to be trusted.
Robin Riebsomer
July 16th, 2010 - 12:45:18 PM
I work for the Indiana State Nurses Assistance Program. We monitor nurses with substance abuse problems for the Board of Nursing. I am not surprised by these statistics. Obviously 33 % of the doctors who are practicing don't understand how placing a doctor in monitoring can assist his/her recovery. That's unfortunate.
I was always taught in nursing shool to put patient safety first. The Hippocratic Oath says "Do no harm." If doctors want to uphold that oath, then they would be best advised to report doctors with substance abuse issues so that no patient is harmed secondary to their substance abuse.
I was always taught in nursing shool to put patient safety first. The Hippocratic Oath says "Do no harm." If doctors want to uphold that oath, then they would be best advised to report doctors with substance abuse issues so that no patient is harmed secondary to their substance abuse.
Fiat Justitia ruat caelum
July 16th, 2010 - 12:47:49 PM
It may be difficult enough to detect a physician with drug or alcohol dependency but its even harder to decide what competence is when it relates to medical care apart from procedures, especially when it involves patients with multiple comobid illnesses. After all, most studies show that specialists rarely provide adequate preventive care and most generalists do not follow clinical guidelines as closely as specialists do. Talk to any geriatrician and he will tell you that most physicians are not competent to care for older people.
j c pickett m d
July 16th, 2010 - 01:22:40 PM
an incompetent physician is a danger to all, and a blackmark to all physicians. he should be reported to the appropriate body at once. some will get needed help.
is md
July 16th, 2010 - 08:46:03 PM
You have to read the comments on yahoo, there is so much hate and hard feelings in the public against the doctors. They sound like a lynching mob. What's up with JAMA to publish such garbage. Do lawyers or investment banker report their fellow co-workers to the authorities?
Leon Hyman M.D.
July 16th, 2010 - 09:31:05 PM
I repoted a DR. who was a drug dispenser to any one to the Feds, and it only took them 2 years before he was arrested. Saying a collegue is incompetant is risky and could lead to a lawsuit for defamation of character. You would have to have pretty ironclad evidence to do that. Lawyer have a way of twisting the facts.
Danny Danziger, MD
July 17th, 2010 - 07:14:09 AM
There are mechanisms to report potentially impaired colleagues anonymously, either through your county medical society or through your hospital's medical staff structure. To not do so is a disservice to the colleague, as well as to the patients and your other coworkers.
M. A. Mitchell, D.O.
July 17th, 2010 - 05:20:29 PM
I had the opportunity and did report a colleague who was very impaired. Also removed him from staff immediately. Myself and every member of the hospital board was sued for $1,000,000 each under something called the "RICO Act". Multiple visits to a Federal magistrates chambers. Treated like a dog by the impaired physicians attorney. Hospital attorney wanted to bail, but I refused and finally won. A year and a half of worrying about it, paying the price. Came out OK, but what a cost. Would I do it again, probably not. He got off with going to rehab for the second time (sealed documents kept us from knowing that at the time this all happened), didn't lose his license, and was back practicing in a couple of months. It was not worth it. I would suggest that, if you consider it, make sure you have a good attorney first.
Dan Schwartz
July 19th, 2010 - 11:11:20 AM
I have had the unfortunate experience of having to report an impaired colleague. Although quite distasteful, it was imperative to do so. We worry about being "whistle blowers" or possible retribution, but if a practitioner is doing something unlawful, or not practicing with reasonable skill and safety, it is our moral and ethical obligation to make such a report. Often, the situation can be resolved through avenues which provide education and support to the offending provider. In actuality, perhaps all medical boards should require such reporting in order for it to be more uniform and less of an individual decision.
Calvin
July 19th, 2010 - 11:43:32 AM
@ is md and Brian:
Outside of medicine and public safety, and perhaps construction and jobs in which workers use dangerous equipment, in what occupations would an impaired employee be as dangerous as an impaired physician/surgeon?
Outside of medicine and public safety, and perhaps construction and jobs in which workers use dangerous equipment, in what occupations would an impaired employee be as dangerous as an impaired physician/surgeon?
Ernie Meloche
July 19th, 2010 - 05:10:08 PM
Alcohol impaired physicians, nurses and other medical personal can be confronted, assessed quickly through a mandatory blood alcohol, removed from immediate care of patients and referred for help. This is the standard of behavior in most hospitals and licensing organizations.
Drug impaired physicians, nurses and health care workers have more difficult testing requirements, may be much harder to detect especially if they have become accustomed to their drug, and also can be completely refractory to intervention as we all know in our practice. Methods for dealing with such substance abuse problems are thus more difficult to access and use in protection of patients from the problem.
We have a greater problem with impaired practitioners whose problem is due to disease, medical or psychiatric, since everyone in practice both relies on their practice for income and self-image and ANY intervention demands knowing their medical condition. This makes the problem a privacy issue and makes discovery of the problem difficult and treatment almost impossible, especially in psychiatric disease.
Having a uniform method for mandatory medical assessment by a physician of ANYONE caring for patients which could be used to detect organic or psychiatric disease would be useful, but is not present in most communities.
The real problem of incompetence is almost never discussed. What about the health care practitioners who are just bad at what they do. Doctors, nurses, and others who just do have not the skills for their practice needs just keep their jobs and do what they do. We have limited means to help doctors who cannot make diagnoses from lack of knowledge who do not access educational methods to improve. Confronting other doctors and nurses who do not know know the current treatment methods is always tricky, and the current programs of M&M and malpractice rounds generate a defensive posture in all concerned rarely improving practices. They generate yet another set of "rules" to which lawyers can refer during the endless court cases to assign blame for bad outcomes.
This is the center of the "licensing" process we are talking about. Incompetence gets documented, reported and reviewed over and over and over by licensing boards and they seem incapable of acting on their findings and spend their time dealing with substance abuse and criminals.
We need a system that does NOT focus primarily on intoxicated and incompetent practioners, but one that fosters EVERYONE, that creates methods to identify our limits and grow, that lets us improve ourselves constantly, and through such a positive culture identifies and helps those who are having troubles with drugs, alcohol, illness or injury.
We can do it better, but declare it to be too costly and take to much effort and time to simply help one another become better at what we do.
There is no such system in existance to my knowledge.
The true answer to your question is that we must build a culture of caring for ourselves which improves and augments us all, throughout the entirety of our professional lives.
Drug impaired physicians, nurses and health care workers have more difficult testing requirements, may be much harder to detect especially if they have become accustomed to their drug, and also can be completely refractory to intervention as we all know in our practice. Methods for dealing with such substance abuse problems are thus more difficult to access and use in protection of patients from the problem.
We have a greater problem with impaired practitioners whose problem is due to disease, medical or psychiatric, since everyone in practice both relies on their practice for income and self-image and ANY intervention demands knowing their medical condition. This makes the problem a privacy issue and makes discovery of the problem difficult and treatment almost impossible, especially in psychiatric disease.
Having a uniform method for mandatory medical assessment by a physician of ANYONE caring for patients which could be used to detect organic or psychiatric disease would be useful, but is not present in most communities.
The real problem of incompetence is almost never discussed. What about the health care practitioners who are just bad at what they do. Doctors, nurses, and others who just do have not the skills for their practice needs just keep their jobs and do what they do. We have limited means to help doctors who cannot make diagnoses from lack of knowledge who do not access educational methods to improve. Confronting other doctors and nurses who do not know know the current treatment methods is always tricky, and the current programs of M&M and malpractice rounds generate a defensive posture in all concerned rarely improving practices. They generate yet another set of "rules" to which lawyers can refer during the endless court cases to assign blame for bad outcomes.
This is the center of the "licensing" process we are talking about. Incompetence gets documented, reported and reviewed over and over and over by licensing boards and they seem incapable of acting on their findings and spend their time dealing with substance abuse and criminals.
We need a system that does NOT focus primarily on intoxicated and incompetent practioners, but one that fosters EVERYONE, that creates methods to identify our limits and grow, that lets us improve ourselves constantly, and through such a positive culture identifies and helps those who are having troubles with drugs, alcohol, illness or injury.
We can do it better, but declare it to be too costly and take to much effort and time to simply help one another become better at what we do.
There is no such system in existance to my knowledge.
The true answer to your question is that we must build a culture of caring for ourselves which improves and augments us all, throughout the entirety of our professional lives.
victor hugo
July 21st, 2010 - 02:41:17 AM
que te parece
Dan Coffey
September 21st, 2010 - 03:27:50 PM
Good Point
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