PROFESSIONAL ISSUESConsumer group decries lack of physician discipline infoPublic Citizen suggests states require medical boards to post criminal and malpractice data online.By Damon Adams, AMNews staff. Nov. 13, 2006. Most state medical boards do a poor job giving physician discipline information on their Web sites, and state legislators should pass laws to make boards provide better data, a new survey said. The Oct. 17 report by consumer advocacy group Public Citizen ranked how boards in each state and the District of Columbia did in compiling and presenting physician disciplinary information. Researchers examined eight categories including types of physician identifying information, board disciplinary action, discipline taken by hospitals, discipline by the federal government, malpractice data and criminal convictions. States with separate boards for MDs and DOs were ranked for each. New Jersey scored the best, followed in the top five by Virginia, Massachusetts, New York and Vermont's MD board. North Dakota rated worst, with New Mexico's DO board, West Virginia's DO board, Louisiana and South Dakota rounding out the bottom five. The report said 22 states had required medical boards to post physician profiles. But unlike similar surveys in 2000 and 2002, the new study looked at use of outside sources of discipline such as hospitals and the federal government. Public Citizen found few sites provided disciplinary actions other than those the boards took. [...]Full text of AMNews content is available to AMA members and paid subscribers.
Copyright 2006 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
|