Guest guest Posted December 21, 2003 Report Share Posted December 21, 2003 So many good docs, thank goodness. However, re bad docs, sometimes a brief letter, stating the bad situation and sent to the new state board of physicians with a copy to that state's governor is sufficient. You can sign it 'concerned citizen.' Sometimes, nothing can be done until or unless the doc does something negligent. But, you can ask the board and governor's office to review the docs application for license in that state to see if he/she told the truth. There are several questions on the app forms for licensure that ask directly, Have you ever had privileges suspended at a hospital? have you ever been convicted of an offense? have you ever been charged with conduct under the accepted standards for practice? have you ever been grieved against or been a defendant in a law suit? If the person answers yes, the board will ask for documentation that the alcoholism, drug addiction, substandard practices have been mediated completely. If the person lies, or withholds the truth and the boards find out about it, the person will not be allowed to practice until they can prove themselves, via various means, to be fit--which might involve drug rehab to the court's satisfaction, close supervision of all of one's work by a competent doctor who will report on the 'doc in trouble' to the board and governor on a regular basis. At the state grievance board I work for, we receive many complaints about everything from trivial/absurd -- he didn't seem to smile-- to egregious-- sexual intrusion, unnecessary services, wrong diagnoses, etc. About half of the grievances are found to be so and bound over to the attorney general's office for legal intervention. About 25% we have no jurisdiction (but a different board often does,). And about 25% are dismissed as 'no violation,' for either it cannot be proved, or it simply was not found to be true. My point is about 10--15 % of our complaints come from people who sign themselves " anonymous. " Regardless, we have to take up the complain and find them often to be valid. Just my 2 cent's worth. love, ceep In a message dated 12/21/03 4:12:10 AM, Graduate-OSSG writes: << From: watnext@... Subject: Re: Re: Upsetting story on CBS news Yes, Amber! That's exactly what's happening all over the country. The law protects the doctors, and it's very hard for patients to find out if the doctor has lost any malpractice suits or been sanctioned somehow. And, to the best of my knowledge, the hospitals don't even have access to much of that information. All they have is word of mouth, and if it's across state lines, that's a long way to travel. Again, that recent case of the nurse in NJ who killed all those people, he was thrown out of several hospitals in PA (right next door to NJ), had been brought up on murder charges, etc., and the hospital had no knowledge of it....very, very scary. in NJ >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.