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Unfair Disciplinary Proceedings by
Boards
by Andy Schlafly, Esq (no login)
New
York State Assembly, Committees on Health, Higher Education, and
Codes. January 31, 2002.
Good afternoon. I'm Andy Schlafly, General Counsel for the Association
of American Physicians and Surgeons ("AAPS"). I am a member
of the New York Bar, and specialize in administrative law.
AAPS is a nonprofit national group of thousands of physicians,
including many practicing in New York. We were founded in 1943 and are
dedicated to promoting the ethical practice of medicine and defending
the patient-physician relationship. AAPS is almost exclusively
membership-funded. We file amicus briefs in defense of physicians who
are unfairly treated in disciplinary proceedings, as in the case of
Dr. Dan Alexander v. State Board for Professional Medical Conduct, Civ.
No. 89006 (N.Y. App. Div. 3rd Dept. 2001).
We have many physician members in New York who feel pressured and
intimidated to protect their own licenses by altering their care to
patients. They are faced with the choice between avoiding the wrath of
insurance companies and delivering the best possible care to their
patients. This intimidation interferes with the ethical practice of
medicine, and ultimately hurts patients.
Physicians feel threatened because they have fewer rights than almost
anyone else in a judicial proceeding. Physicians can lose their
license based on very little proof, and inadequate due process.
Physicians are vulnerable to manipulation of the process for economic
reasons, rather than true concern for patient health.
For example, we see unexplained targeting of certain types of
physicians for discipline. Physicians who treat Lyme Disease are
frequent victims of investigations, but not due to any complaints by
their patients. Third-party payers, who find the aggressive treatment
of Lyme Disease costly, have too much influence over the disciplining
of a physician.
AAPS has a member in New York who even predicted that he would be
investigated because of his proactive treatment of Lyme Disease, and
he was. His patients love him because his treatments are so effective.
But those who pay for the treatments find it profitable to delicense
physicians who are costly. Economic harm should not be a basis for
revoking or restricting a physician's license. A clear showing of
medical harm to patients should be required.
If an insurance company is unhappy with a physician, then it has full
recourse to our court system to bring a lawsuit, whereupon the
physician-defendant would have the safeguards of due process rights
essential to the fair administration of justice. These rights include
meaningful prior notice of the charges against him, right to a public
hearing, right to full cross-examination of witnesses, right to a
decision based only on information in the record, and right to a
meaningful appeal. But these basic due process rights, which are so
fundamental to fairness, are glaringly absent from disciplinary
hearings. Third party payers alleging economic harm can more easily
delicense a physician than prevail in litigation against him.
It is ironic, and unjustified, that a physician enjoys greater rights
in defending a fraud action than he does in a disciplinary proceeding
with his license at stake. It is likewise irrational that a physician
enjoys greater rights in contesting a simple speeding ticket than in a
disciplinary proceeding threatening his livelihood. If a physician is
sued by a patient, an employee, or a neighbor, he enjoys the due
process rights we all find essential. But if he is subjected to a
disciplinary proceeding, the most essential due process rights are not
there to protect him.
Patients are the ultimate victims of this vulnerability of their
physicians. Patients deserve the undivided attention and care of their
physicians, without intimidation by third parties. Instead, the unfair
disciplinary process creates a conflict-of-interest for physicians,
such that they must choose between taking precautions to defend their
license versus acting in the best interest of the health of their
patients. When those choices are in conflict, the patient's health
suffers. In some cases, patients lose their trusted physician entirely
based on an unfair proceeding that is shielded from the accountability
of public scrutiny.
Specific Proposals.
Physicians should have the right to request a public hearing to obtain
the benefits of public scrutiny. The interests of hundreds of patients
are at stake when suspension or termination of a physician's license
is adjudicated. Physicians should be able to invite their patients to
attend the proceedings, and physicians should have the right to open
the proceedings to the entire public. Defendants have a right to
public trial. Why should a physician's rights be any less?
Physicians should have the right to full cross-examination of the
witnesses testifying against him. Currently, the Administrative Law
Judge (ALJ) can and does limit cross-examination. Rules of Evidence,
essential to protecting the rights of the accused, are not followed.
They should be. Cross-examination is the best defense against perjury.
Without public scrutiny, and with cross-examination often limited, the
essential safeguards against perjury are missing.
In one case, a physician lost his New York license to practice because
the ALJ cut off cross-examination of witnesses on issues crucial to
the disciplinary hearing. Defendants in legal proceedings have full
rights of cross-examination. Why should a physician's rights be any
less?
The burden of proof in a disciplinary proceeding to revoke a
physician's license is shockingly low. The standard is the lowest
"preponderance of evidence" test, which simply requires that
something be considered more likely than not. That standard is much
lower than the criminal "beyond reasonable doubt" standard,
and also lower than the "clear and convincing evidence"
requirement for many civil actions, such as fraud.
It is unconscionable that a physician can lose his license, and
hundreds of patients lose their doctor, without a showing of
"clear and convincing" proof of wrongdoing. If there is a
49% chance that the physician did nothing wrong, then he and his
patients should receive the benefit of the doubt. Yet in one case,
revocation of a physician's license was imposed even though the
factfinder admitted that there was a substantial chance the physician
acted properly. The New York State Board for Professional Medical
Conduct expressly based its decision to revoke the physician's
license, destroy his livelihood, and deprive hundreds of patients
their trusted physician, on a mere "51%" probability. Given
this low standard, a physician could win a case in court and yet still
lose his license in a disciplinary proceeding. That injustice must
end.
The low standard of proof jeopardizes the traditional reliance by
physicians on chaperones in the examining room to defend against
baseless allegations. A New York physician lost his license when a
patient contradicted the testimony of a chaperone that nothing
improper happened in the examining room. The State Board claimed that
the chaperone was biased because she had been retained by the
physician. The reliance by physicians, including many members of our
organization, on chaperones to defend against allegations is now in
doubt. If the standard were "clear and convincing evidence,"
then chaperone testimony could not be so easily rejected.
Physicians should not lose their license when their own accusers, and
family members of accusers, continue to see the physicians for care
with full knowledge of the disciplinary proceedings. Uninterrupted use
of a physician by patient or patient's family should create a
presumption that the patient is satisfied with the physician's
services. Nor should the State be interfering with the
patient-physician relationship by restricting or terminating the
physician's license while the relevant patients continue to demand the
doctor's services.
The standard for judicial review of these disciplinary proceedings is
also far too deferential. The courts assume that physicians have
benefited from full due process, when in fact they have not. The
findings of fact are assumed to be true on appeal, when in many cases
they should be reviewed de novo. For example, any findings in a
decision revoking or restricting a physician's license, which are not
supported in the record, should require a remand rather than
affirmance. On at least one occasion, the Hearing Committee declared
that the physician had a "deep seated psychological
problem," without anything in the record to support that
psychoanalysis. Despite this and other errors in the factual finding,
the revocation in that case was nevertheless affirmed. A remand should
be required, as in other areas of administrative law.
The government should not be permitted to shop around for experts
until it finds someone willing to testify against the physician.
Rather, government experts at these disciplinary proceedings should be
selected from an objective group of physicians, as juries are. There
should be guidelines requiring that those experts review information
by both sides to the dispute.
If the government expert feels that there is no case against the
physician, then that should dispose of the matter. Instead, the
government can and does simply look for additional experts until it
finds one of its liking. We have even seen the government fire one of
its experts because he, after reviewing the facts, testified for an
accused physician. This government manipulation of experts is
inconsistent with the objectivity and high standards that should be
required before revoking a physician's license.
Physicians need discovery rights with respect to the experts and
hearing committee members, who effectively determine the outcome. Like
true defendants, physicians need to be able to explore and eliminate
possible conflicts-of-interest that create bias in the proceedings.
Judges have broad duties to publicly disclose information about
themselves. So should experts and those who sit on these disciplinary
hearing committees. There should be an analog to the voir dire in jury
trials to eliminate potential bias.
Rarely should the State be telling patients that they cannot see a
particular physician because his license has been restricted,
suspended, or terminated. Only the most egregious, documented cases of
violation of trust should be candidates for license revocation.
Patients should have as broad and diverse selection of physicians as
possible, without government or third party interference.
Conclusion.
The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons opposes the
intimidation of physicians through deprivation of their rights at
disciplinary proceedings. This interference destroys the integrity of
the patient-physician relationship and the ethical practice of
medicine. Please consider the reforms suggested by AAPS and others at
this hearing.
Thank you.
Andy Schlafly, Esq., AAPS General Counsel, 908-719-8608
Posted
on Feb 13, 2002, 10:06 PM
from IP address 63.14.236.141
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