University of Technology Sydney Faculty of Law, PO BOX 123, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia.Email:
Aust Health Rev. 2020 Apr;44(2):190-199. doi: 10.1071/AH18239.
Objective There is a gap in knowledge regarding serious disciplinary matters concerning health professionals under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law Act 2009 (hereafter 'National Law'). The present study applies a typology of misconduct to the first 7 years of available tribunal cases under the National Law brought against the five most populous regulated health professions with the overarching goal of mapping the relationship between type of misconduct and outcome. As subquestions, the study examined whether the ostensibly uniform law is producing consistency of outcomes, both between the professions and between jurisdictions. Methods All publicly available Australian tribunal-level decisions concerning complaints of serious misconduct and/or impairment brought against the five most populous regulated health professions (nurses and midwives, doctors, psychologists, pharmacists, and dentists) were gathered from 1 July 2010 to 30 June 2017. Decisions were coded for case and respondent attributes, the type/s of misconduct alleged, whether proved, and the relevant disciplinary outcome. Respondent attributes were: profession, sex, legal representation, and certain identified 'risk' factors from previous studies. The type of allegation was coded based on five main categories or heads of misconduct, with subtypes within each. Outcomes for proved conduct were coded and categorised for severity. Analyses of cases was conducted using SPSS, version 21 (IBM, New York, NY, USA). Data was subject to statistical analysis using Pearson's Chi-squared test with an α value of 0.05. Results Major variations were identified in outcomes across the professions, with doctors being subject to less severe outcomes than other professions, in particular compared with nurses, even when the same main head of misconduct was in issue. Differences in legal representation did not completely account for such variation. Marked disparities were also identified between outcomes in different states and territories, suggesting that the National Law is not being applied in a uniform manner. Conclusion Tribunal cases reflected complaint data in that: (1) male practitioners were greatly over-represented as respondents; (2) outcomes were most severe for sexual misconduct and least severe for clinical care; and (3) doctors faced less severe outcomes than other professions. There were also significant variations in severity of outcome by jurisdiction. Variations were more pronounced when deregistration was the focus of analysis. What is known about this topic? Existing research on complaints data under the National Law in place since 2010 has suggested that doctors may be receiving less severe outcomes than other professions at board level. There is a gap in knowledge concerning serious disciplinary matters heard by tribunals. Unlike data on complaints against regulated health professionals collated by AHPRA, legal tribunals, which hear only the most serious matters, do not record data on cases in a consistent or centralised form. What does this paper add? This study is the first to compare tribunal outcomes for the five most populous professions by reference to the type of misconduct proved. The finding that different professions are receiving different outcomes for the same malfeasance is novel. Other novel findings include significant variations in severity of outcome by jurisdiction, more pronounced variations in outcomes by both profession and jurisdiction when deregistration was the focus of analysis and variations in outcome according to legal representation. What are the implications for practitioners? There are major implications for policy makers and decision makers in terms of whether the National Law is operating consistently, with important outcomes for practitioners in terms of equitable and fair treatment when facing disciplinary charges.
目的
《2009 年(全国)健康从业者监管法》(以下简称“国家法律”)下,关于卫生专业人员的严重纪律事项的知识存在差距。本研究将不当行为类型应用于国家法律下针对五个最多监管的健康职业的前 7 年可获得的法庭案件,其总体目标是绘制不当行为类型与结果之间的关系。作为子问题,该研究检查了表面上统一的法律是否在职业之间和司法管辖区之间产生了结果的一致性。
方法
从 2010 年 7 月 1 日至 2017 年 6 月 30 日,收集了针对五个最多监管的健康职业(护士和助产士、医生、心理学家、药剂师和牙医)的严重不当行为和/或损害投诉的所有公开可用的澳大利亚法庭级决定。决定按案例和答辩人属性、指控的不当行为类型、是否证明以及相关纪律结果进行编码。答辩人属性包括:职业、性别、法律代表以及以前研究中确定的某些“风险”因素。指控类型是根据五个主要的不当行为类别或头部,每个类别都有子类进行编码的。证明行为的结果进行了编码和分类,以确定严重程度。使用 SPSS 版本 21(IBM,纽约,NY,美国)对案例进行分析。使用 Pearson 的卡方检验对数据进行统计分析,α 值为 0.05。
结果
不同职业之间的结果存在明显差异,与其他职业相比,医生的结果更为轻微,特别是与护士相比,即使是同样的主要不当行为指控也是如此。法律代表的差异并不能完全解释这种差异。不同州和地区之间的结果也存在明显差异,表明国家法律没有以统一的方式适用。
结论
法庭案件反映了投诉数据,即:(1)男性从业者作为答辩人大大过多;(2)结果对性不当行为最严重,对临床护理最轻微;(3)医生面临的结果比其他职业轻。司法管辖区的结果严重程度也存在重大差异。当重点是取消注册时,差异更加明显。
关于这个话题,已知的是什么?
自 2010 年以来,关于国家法律下投诉数据的现有研究表明,在委员会一级,医生可能比其他职业受到的结果更为轻微。关于法庭审理的严重纪律事项的知识存在差距。
与 AHPRA 收集的针对监管健康专业人员的投诉数据不同,仅审理最严重事项的法律法庭没有以一致或集中的形式记录案件数据。
这篇论文增加了什么?
本研究是第一个参考证明的不当行为类型比较五个最多监管的职业的法庭结果的研究。对于相同的不当行为,不同职业得到不同结果的发现是新颖的。其他新颖的发现包括司法管辖区之间结果严重程度的重大差异,当取消注册是分析重点时,职业和司法管辖区之间结果的差异更为明显,以及根据法律代表的结果差异。
这对从业者有什么影响?
对于政策制定者和决策者来说,国家法律是否一致运作存在重大影响,对于面临纪律指控的从业者来说,公平和公正待遇的结果也很重要。