Many Doctors Fail to Report Incompetent Colleagues, Survey Finds

One in three physicians failed to report  colleagues they found to be “impaired or incompetent,” according to the results of a new survey.

An American Medical Association policy requires physicians to report colleagues who they believe are  unfit to practice. In the survey of 2,000 physicians by doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital, incompetence included a range of problems, from drug addiction to colleagues not being up to date on new treatments, Reuters reports.

Respondents cited several reasons for not filing reports, including fear that colleagues would be punished too harshly, or because they did not believe any action would be taken. The most common reason cited was that they thought someone else had already filed a report.

“I think there’s no excuse for less than 100 percent of physicians holding true to our professional ideals,” Dr. Matthew Wynia, director of the AMA’s Institute for Ethics, told Reuters. “Reporting an impaired or incompetent colleague is very clear cut. It’s a professional obligation.”

Physicians in single or two-person practices were the least likely to report their colleagues, possibly because they don’t have the same reporting systems that hospitals and larger practices have in place.

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