Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Are State Medical Boards Doing Enough To Protect Patients?


Fierce Healthcare has;
Are State Medical Boards Doing Enough To Protect Patients

Wisconsin state medical board faces scrutiny with few actions against doctors


The Wisconsin state medical board is facing criticism that the state fails to discipline doctors who make mistakes, according to a special report by the Wisconsin State Journal.

Wisconsin has one of the lowest rates of physician discipline, with the other low discipline states being Minnesota, South Carolina, Massachusetts and Connecticut, according to Public Citizen 
data analyzed by the Wisconsin State Journal. Wisconsin has 1.9 actions per 1,000 physicians.

Although the low rate could signal better care in the state, as the board noted, the watchdog group says it's more likely due to poor disciplinary action. Doctors who make mistakes often don't face serious consequences. More than half of 218 doctors disciplined from 2010 to 2012 only got reprimands. More than 50 of those cases involved patient harm or death, the newspaper noted.

Public Citizen has long argued the 
lax state medical boards allow incompetent or dangerous doctors to fly under the radar. Although the state medical board follows up on complaints, it does not conduct its own investigations, according to state statutes. If validated, the complaints go on the physician's record but do not affect his or her practice. Instead, physicians routinely undergo reprimands, fines and re-education.
Families of the affected patients said it's not enough and that the punishment doesn't fit the crime.

However, the state Supreme Court ruled the medical board is supposed to protect the public, deter wrongdoing and rehabilitate doctors--not punish them.

In addition, the state medical board said it lacks the resources to revoke or suspend medical licenses more strongly, according to Sheldon Wasserman, board chairman of the State Medical Examining Board. "That comes at a cost. We don't have the resources."

The report questions the purpose of state medical boards at all.

"It's a dysfunctional process," Dan Rottier, a medical malpractice attorney from Madison, said about Wisconsin's medical board. "We tell people never to expect them to do anything."


Although the Federation of State Medical Boards in May noted that state medical boards punished 6.8 percent more dangerous doctors in 2011, with increased disciplinary actions, Public Citizen said state medical boards still are falling short on protecting patients from inferior care, partly because of shrinking state budgets.

For more information:
- see the
 Wisconsin State Journal article, map data on actions and chart of reprimanded physiciansRelated Articles:
Could a national registry save hospital from hiring problem workers?
Medical board, watchdog group clash over doc discipline
HHS: Doctor malpractice, disciplinary data no longer public
Medical board lacks resources to punish dangerous docs
High number of New York doctors on medical board watch list
State medical board fails to discipline, disclose bad docs
State medical board disciplining more docs


Thank You Fierce Healthcare and Ms Cheung-Larivee



Most, of the mis-behaviors listed in the linked chart:

map data on actions

Are Incurable 'Mental Illnesses' according to Psychiatry, and as Ms Cheung Larivee's article highlights, very little if anything gets done about the far greater number of Physicians harming and killing patients through similar behaviors.



They're still working, (and Billing Medicare/Medicaid/Private Insurers/Patients) as the victims of their Seance Science Branch are consigned to having their Unalienable Civil Rights Illegally Stolen, tossed onto the Public Dole, and used up to peddle drugs which the VA has determined have: "No Positive Outcome".

Dear US Department Of Veterans Affairs, An Open Letter

And they're All too Freaking Brilliant to Ever find out about that "No Positive Outcome", even though they work With those "No Positive Outcome" drugs day in, day out, and Lie through their Teeth about those drugs, for decades.

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