Harbitz Martin B, Stensland Per Steinar, Abelsen Birgit
Department of Community Medicine, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norwegian Centre for Rural Medicine, 9037, Tromsø, Norway.
Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care, University of Bergen, 5007, Bergen, Norway.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 Apr 9;21(1):324. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-06334-2.
Physicians who perform unsafe practices and harm patients may be disciplined. In Norway, there are five types of disciplinary action, ranging from a warning for the least serious examples of malpractice to loss of licence for the most serious ones. Disciplinary actions always involve medical malpractice. The aims of this study were to investigate the frequency and distribution of disciplinary actions by the Norwegian Board of Health Supervision for doctors in Norway and to uncover nation-wide patient safety issues.
We retrospectively investigated all 953 disciplinary actions for doctors given by the Board between 2011 and 2018. We categorized these according to type of action, recipient's profession, organizational factors and geographical location of the recipient. Frequencies, cross tables, rates and linear regression were used for statistical analysis.
Rural general practitioners received the most disciplinary actions of all doctors and had their licence revoked or restricted 2.1 times more frequently than urban general practitioners. General practitioners and private specialists received respectively 98.7 and 91.0 disciplinary actions per 1000 doctors. Senior consultants and junior doctors working in hospitals received respectively 17.0 and 6.4 disciplinary actions per 1000 doctors. Eight times more actions were received by primary care doctors than secondary care doctors. Doctors working in primary care were given a warning 10.6 times more often and had their licence revoked or restricted 4.6 times more often than those in secondary care.
The distribution and frequency of disciplinary actions by the Norwegian Board of Health Supervision clearly varied according to type of health care facility. Private specialists and general practitioners, especially those working in rural clinics, received the most disciplinary actions. These results deserve attention from health policy-makers and warrant further studies to determine the factors that influence medical malpractice. Moreover, the supervisory authorities should assess whether their procedures for reacting to malpractice are efficient and adequate for all types of physicians working in Norway.
实施不安全医疗行为并伤害患者的医生可能会受到纪律处分。在挪威,有五种纪律处分类型,从对最轻微医疗失误的警告到对最严重失误的吊销执照。纪律处分总是涉及医疗失误。本研究的目的是调查挪威卫生监督局对挪威医生进行纪律处分的频率和分布情况,并发现全国范围内的患者安全问题。
我们回顾性调查了该委员会在2011年至2018年期间对医生做出的所有953起纪律处分。我们根据处分类型、受处分者的职业、组织因素和受处分者的地理位置对这些处分进行了分类。使用频率、交叉表、比率和线性回归进行统计分析。
乡村全科医生受到的纪律处分在所有医生中最多,其执照被吊销或限制的频率是城市全科医生的2.1倍。全科医生和私人专科医生每1000名医生分别受到98.7次和91.0次纪律处分。在医院工作的高级顾问和初级医生每1000名医生分别受到17.0次和6.4次纪律处分。基层医疗医生受到的处分是二级医疗医生的八倍。与二级医疗医生相比,基层医疗医生被警告的频率高出10.6倍,执照被吊销或限制的频率高出4.6倍。
挪威卫生监督局纪律处分的分布和频率因医疗机构类型而异。私人专科医生和全科医生,尤其是在农村诊所工作的医生,受到的纪律处分最多。这些结果值得卫生政策制定者关注,并需要进一步研究以确定影响医疗失误的因素。此外,监管当局应评估其对医疗失误做出反应的程序是否对在挪威工作的所有类型医生有效且充分。