University of North Carolina School of Law, Chapel Hill.
University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill.
JAMA Netw Open. 2024 Nov 4;7(11):e2443893. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.43893.
False medical information disseminated dangerously during the COVID-19 pandemic, with certain physicians playing a surprisingly prominent role. Medical boards engendered widespread criticism for not imposing forceful sanctions, but considerable uncertainty remains about how the professional licensure system regulates physician-spread misinformation.
To compare the level of professional discipline of physicians for spreading medical misinformation relative to discipline for other offenses.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study analyzed and coded publicly reported medical board disciplinary actions in the 5 most populous US states. The analysis included data from January 1, 2020, through May 30, 2023, for California, Florida, New York, and Pennsylvania and from January 1, 2020, through March 30, 2022, for Texas.
Medical board disciplinary proceedings that resulted in some form of sanction were analyzed. Codes were assigned for the different types of offenses relied on by medical boards for imposing physician discipline.
Among 3128 medical board disciplinary proceedings in the 5 most populous states, spreading misinformation to the community was the least common reason for medical board discipline of physicians (6 [0.1%] of all identified offenses). Two reasons tied for third least common: patient-directed misinformation (21 [0.3%]) and inappropriate advertising or patient solicitation (21 [0.3%]). The frequency of misinformation conduct was exponentially lower than more common reasons for discipline, such as physician negligence (1911 [28.7%]), problematic record-keeping (990 [14.9%]), and inappropriate prescribing (901 [13.5%]). Patient-directed misinformation provided a basis for discipline 3 times as often as spreading misinformation to the community. The frequency of disciplinary actions for any reasons related to COVID-19 care, even if not about misinformation, was also quite low (10 [0.2%]). Sanctions in misinformation actions tended to be relatively light.
The frequency of discipline for physician-spread misinformation observed in this cross-sectional study was quite low despite increased salience and medical board warnings since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic about the dangers of physicians spreading falsehoods. These findings suggest that there is a serious disconnect between regulatory guidance and enforcement and that medical boards relied on spreading misinformation to patients as a reason for discipline 3 times more frequently than disseminating falsehoods to the public. These results shed light on important policy concerns about professional licensure, including why, under current patient-centered frameworks, this form of regulation may be particularly ill-suited to address medical misinformation.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,错误的医学信息被危险地传播,某些医生扮演了令人惊讶的突出角色。医学委员会因未实施强有力的制裁而受到广泛批评,但对于专业执照制度如何规范医生传播错误信息,仍存在相当大的不确定性。
将传播医学错误信息的医生的专业纪律水平与其他违法行为的纪律水平进行比较。
设计、地点和参与者:本横断面研究分析和编码了美国 5 个人口最多的州公开报告的医学委员会纪律处分。分析包括 2020 年 1 月 1 日至 2023 年 5 月 30 日加利福尼亚州、佛罗里达州、纽约州和宾夕法尼亚州的数据,以及 2020 年 1 月 1 日至 2022 年 3 月 30 日德克萨斯州的数据。
分析了导致某种形式制裁的医学委员会纪律处分程序。为医学委员会实施医生纪律处分所依据的不同类型的违法行为分配了代码。
在 5 个人口最多的州的 3128 项医学委员会纪律处分程序中,向社区传播错误信息是医生最不常见的纪律处分原因(所有确定的违法行为中占 6 [0.1%])。有两个原因并列第三常见:针对患者的错误信息(21 [0.3%])和不适当的广告或患者招揽(21 [0.3%])。错误信息行为的频率呈指数级低于更常见的纪律处分原因,例如医生疏忽(1911 [28.7%])、记录保存问题(990 [14.9%])和不适当的处方(901 [13.5%])。针对患者的错误信息提供纪律处分的依据是向社区传播错误信息的 3 倍。与 COVID-19 护理相关的任何原因的纪律处分行为,即使不是错误信息,也相当低(10 [0.2%])。错误信息行为的制裁往往相对较轻。
尽管自 COVID-19 大流行开始以来,医学委员会就警告了医生传播虚假信息的危险,但在这项横断面研究中,观察到的医生传播错误信息的纪律处分频率相当低。这些发现表明,监管指导和执行之间存在严重脱节,并且医学委员会将向患者传播错误信息作为纪律处分的原因的频率是向公众传播虚假信息的 3 倍。这些结果揭示了关于专业执照的重要政策问题,包括为什么在当前以患者为中心的框架下,这种形式的监管可能特别不适合解决医学错误信息。