| Bill would monitor doctors' behavior
By Raja Mishra, Globe Staff, 1/26/2003
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a groundbreaking attempt to police doctors' behavior, state lawmakers will
soon consider a measure allowing government officials to punish physicians
who repeatedly offend or intimidate patients and colleagues. The bill opens
a new front in the national movement to hold doctors accountable for
second-rate care.
The proposal, written by a Harvard medical-error specialist, is believed
by its supporters to be the first bill of its kind in the nation.
It comes at a time of increasingly vehement public demands that doctors
be held accountable not only for medical mistakes but for poor bedside
manner and workplace demeanor, which studies have shown can erode the
quality of care they provide.
Responding, in part, to recent horror stories of physican mistakes and
crimes, the new measure delves beyond clinical errors into the more
ambiguous terrain of attitude in a high-pressure, hard-charging profession.
''Do their attitude and comments engender trust among patients? Respect?
Do they treat nurses with appropriate respect? It's basic stuff but it makes
a big difference,'' said state Senator Richard T. Moore, an Uxbridge
Democrat and a key health care lawmaker who is sponsoring the bill. ''A lot
of patient recovery depends on mental attitude.''
Though few local doctors and hospitals have seen the proposal, many
oppose such a state-run grading sytem, calling it an intrusive measure that
would further burden swamped state health agencies while duplicating
procedures in place at most hospitals.
Statistics on ''soft'' measures of doctor care like bedside manner are
difficult to come by. At Physician Health Service, the nonprofit firm that
counsels many of the state's troubled doctors, behavioral problems accounted
for 30 percent of the cases handled this year - double the percentage a
decade ago, suggesting the problem may be growing, specialists said.
Local hospital officals, however, insisted they already monitor doctor
behavior with comprehensive patient satisfaction and doctor evaluation
systems, which sometimes result in doctor discipline, including firings.
''We are doing a lot internally. We act on it. It's not data for the sake
of data,'' said Dr. Robert Goldszer, associate chief medical officer at
Brigham and Women's Hospital.
The architect of the new measure, Harvard's Dr. Lucian Leape, also
authored a 1998 government-commissioned report that estimated that up to
98,000 people die annually because of medical errors in the United States.
His study helped galvanize the movement to demand more accountability from
doctors.
The new bill directs the state medical board to craft a list of
behavioral criteria on which doctors would be judged every two years, such
as rudeness, demeanor with nurses, punctuality, behavior with patients, and
vulgar remarks.
Exactly how state regulators would assess individual physicians was not
specified in the bill, though Moore said interviews with physician
colleagues and nurses would play a central role. Those flunking could have
their hospital credentials revoked. Repeated failures could lead to a
suspended medical license, though all discipline would be open to appeal.
Moore expects Beacon Hill debate on the measure to begin in March. When
told that many doctors oppose the proposal, he replied, ''The ones who have
that reaction probably need it.''
Physician Health Service counseled 163 physicians last year, almost half
of them medical residents and internal medicine doctors. That number
represents a small minority of the more than 15,000 doctors practicing in
the state.
Hospitals themselves catch the vast majority of cases quickly, said
Brigham's Goldszer, who oversees a system that quizzes every patient,
through mail-in surveys, on their satisfaction with doctors, as well as more
mundane aspects of their stay, such as food and hospital cleanliness.
''It's important that each doctor is held to high standards,'' he said.
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center conducts phone surveys of all
patients. Both hospitals have extensive in-house procedures for dealing with
serious complaints raised by patients and staff. Problematic doctors must
follow staff behavioral recommendations or face discipline, including job
termination, though hospital officials said such drastic action is extremely
rare.
The state Board of Registration in Medicine, charged with actually
running the proposed doctor evaluations, views the idea warily.
''That would be a tremendous drain on resources, and would require extra
funding,'' said Nancy Achin Sullivan, the board's executive director.
''We've taken tough action when we've needed to take it,'' she said,
citing recent disciplinary actions against a doctor who started mid-surgery
fisticuffs with a colleague and another who angrily threw bloody sponges at
a nurse.
But the measure's supporters seek to catch the less dramatic cases they
say eat at health care quality.
''It would be a pretty significant cultural shift for doctors,'' said
Moore.
Raja Mishra can be reached at
rmishra@globe.com.
This story ran on page B1 of the Boston Globe on
1/26/2003.
© Copyright
2003 Globe Newspaper Company.
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