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"Go To Where The Silence Is and Say Something."
Amy Goodman
If your doctor faces defamation,
or if you are a doctor facing peer-review for profit, contact Dr. Moore at 803 447 4565, Dr. Huntoon at aapsonline.org
(800-635-1196), S. Bussey M.D. ,J.D. in California via UAPD.com, or myself at 757 397 5260 (HButler@pol.net).
Dr. Verner S. Waite won his case in 1986, the year of PATRICK v. Burget and the passage of the
Health Care Quality Improvement Act:
"Six of my cases were brought up for review by a tissue committee controlled by competitors. A nurse (sic), employed by the Saint Francis
Hospital, testified that I had the highest rate of complication. Why such testimony was admitted is a
matter of some interest, in itself. Liability for bearing false witness is an important related matter, in itself, and falls
under the topic of immunity. Under our gracious new laws, I would
not be able to win $500, 000 today were a nurse again caught committing libel." Verner S. Waite M.D., FACS (Present
value of $514,000 26 years later at 3.1% inflation = $ 1,136, 811.39.)
Semmelweis Society
International (SSI) is in court undergoing a "civil war." This part
of the organization (the Founders) does NOT charge for testimony
or career-guidance, in accordance with the position of Dr. Verner Waite,
Founder of The Semmelweis Society, Incorporated in California in 1986, who approved the re-incorporation of his society
as Semmelweis Society International in Tennessee in 2003 by Drs. Bard, Hinnant, and Butler. As one of
3 founders, I am committed to continuing his policy of not charging doctors for testimony.
SSI was founded in 2003
in Tennessee by Drs. Bard, Hinnant, and myself with Dr. Waite's approval to pursue his philosophy of due process in peer-review--"Peer-Review
with 'Clean Hands' ." The president is Dr. Blake Moore at 803 447 4565. I wrote two web sites: This web
site and www.Semmelweis.org, which was taken from SSI in 2008 as reported by George Holmes Ph.D.
who had been its editor and webmaster for ~ 2 years.
Dr. Holmes also served
as Treasurer at the time of the related theft of ~$5,000, as documented in a lawsuit in Nashville: Dr. Blake Moore
and I have joined Professor Holmes to recover both the stolen $5,000 and
the stolen second web site (Semmelweis.org) which I originally wrote with the
asistance of Andrew Holley J.D. and which I donated to SSI.
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Editorial, Southern Medical
Journal, March, 1993:
Should Due Process Be Part of Hospital Peer Review?
Medical peer review is the process by
which a committee of physicians investigates the medical care rendered by a colleague in order to determine whether accepted
standards of care have been met. The professional or personal conduct of a physician may also be investigated. If the committee
finds that the physician departed from accepted standards, it may recommend limiting or terminating the physician's privileges
at that institution. If the physician's privileges are restricted for more than 30 days, federal law requires the peer review
committee to report that fact to the National Practitioner Data Bank (1).
There is no federal statute
that requires peer review committees to observe due process, which the Supreme Court has defined as (1) giving
written notice of the actions contemplated, (2) convening a hearing, (3) allowing both sides
to present evidence at the hearing, and (4) having an independent adjudicator (2). Prior
to the Health Care Quality Improvement Act of 1986 (HCQIA) (3), the effects of an adverse peer review finding were
restricted to the hospital involved. Because the HCQIA mandates the reporting of disciplinary actions of peer review committees
to the National Practitioner Data Bank, such a report could harm a physician's career throughout the nation (1-4).
Medical
peer review is usually based on the screening of medical records, which places physicians with poor record-keeping skills
at a disadvantage, and ignores the fact that medical records are often a poor indicator of the quality of care (5).
Additionally, there is no requirement that the physician be given notice and an opportunity to be heard, and there is no requirement
that members of the peer review committee be unbiased. The HCQIA recommends that the physician should get notice of the allegations,
time to prepare for a hearing, a list of witnesses, the right to legal counsel, and an impartial fact finder. However, the act concludes "A professional review body's
failure to meet the conditions described in this subsection shall not, in itself, constitute failure to meet the standards
of this act." This failure of the HCQIA to require due process calls into question the fundamental fairness of the medical
peer review system.
The reason that due process should be a part of any fact-finding endeavor was stated by Justice
Goldberg in SILVER v NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE:
'Experience teaches...that the affording of procedural safeguards,
which by their nature serve to illuminate the underlying facts, in itself often operates to prevent erroneous decisions on
the merits from occurring (7).'
The purpose of requiring due process is to ensure that the actions
taken are not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable. Where there is no due process, the system invites abuse (8).
Peer review in its
current form fails to protect an investigated physician from committee members having an economic or personal bias. Economic
bias occurs when a committee member has a financial interest in the outcome. If the challenged physician is a partner or associate,
any error that he may have made is likely to be considered to have been unavoidable. On the other hand, peer review has already
been used to force a competing physician out of practice (9). Such economic bias denies due process (10).
The United States Supreme Court struck down a decision from Ohio's municipal court system in which the judge was partly paid
from the fines he assessed. The Court found that the system gave an incentive to rule one way rather than the other
(10).
Personal bias is inevitable when coworkers judge each other. Some people are very likable, and
others illuminate the room by their absence.
Federal law prohibits a federal judge from hearing cases in which
his impartiality might reasonably be questioned or in which he has a financial interest (11). The same standards
should apply to member of a peer review committee. The potential for abuse when these suggested procedures are not followed would indicate the need for
mandatory due process.
Due process, which is designed to limit these abuses, is not required by the Constitution
of the United States unless there is government action that affects a liberty or property right (12,13). The case
of PAUL v DAVIS illustrates the legal meaning of property rights as applied to employment (14). The police labeled
the plaintiff as a shoplifter and advised local businesses to watch him carefully. The plaintiff sued, claiming that the government
was injuring his reputation without due process. The Supreme Court ruled against the plaintiff, but stated that should there
be an effect on employment, then such injury would invoke the constitutional protection (14).
The sole reason
for reporting the results of peer reviews is to restrict the practices of incompetent physicians. Congress cited the following
as the very reason for the act: 'There is a national need to restrict the ability of incompetent physicians to move from
state to state without disclosure or discovery of the physicians'...incompetent performance (15).'
The
right to practice medicine without a governmental agency erroneously reporting that a physician has been deficient in his
actions is a constitutional property right. Rights, even constitutional rights, can be waived by express agreement, or by
the failure to assert those rights. State institutions, however, may not make waiver of a constitutional right a condition
for employment (16).
In 1986, New York State enacted a system of physician discipline that includes
a hearing presided over by an administrative law judge, to ensure due process (17,18). Although this system provides
due process, it has the glaring problem of giving control of hospital privileges to lawyers. A far better solution is for
peer review committees to be required to observe due process. Lawyers and other non-physicians may have a role as consultants,
but should not be voting committee members.
The effects of an adverse peer review decision are no longer limited
to the relationship between a physician and a hospital. The decision becomes part of the National Practitioner Data Bank.
Medical peer review must provide physicians the protections of due process.
Scott E. Segall, JD Judge,
El Paso Criminal Law Magistrate Court
William Pearl, MD William
Beaumont Army Medical Center Box 70614 El Paso, Texas 79920
The opinions or assertions herein
are the private views of the authors and are not to be construed as official or as reflecting the views of the Department
of the Army or the Department of Defense.
References
- Health Care Quality Improvement Act
of 1986, 42 USC &11133
- VITEK v JONES, 445 US 480 (1980)
- Health Care Quality Improvement Act
of 1986, 42 USC &11101
- Iglehart JK: Congress moves to bolster
peer review: the health care quality improvement act of 1986. N Eng J Med 1987; 316:960-964
- Steffen GE: Quality medical care, a
definition. JAMA 1988; 260:56-61
- Health Care Quality Improvement Act
of 1986, 42USC &11112(b)
- SILVER v NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, 373
US 341(1963)
- BOARD OF REGENTS v ROTH, 408 US 564
(1972)
- Green R: Hospital peer review in a hostile
environment. J Med Assoc Ga 1987; 76:138-140
- TUMEY v OHIO, 273 US510 (1927)
- 28 USC $455
- US Constitution, Amend XIV
- Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 US 564
(1972)
- Paul v Davis, 424 US 693 (1976)
- 42 USC $11101(2)
- Rutan v Republican Party of Illinois,
110 SC: 2729 (1990)
- New York State Laws of 1986, Chapter
266
- O'Keefe
DE, Conway GL: Physician discipline and professional conduct. NY State J Med 1988; 88:146-148
HCQIA of 1986 is the
law disregarding due-process, in violation of the Constitution: U.S. medicine is unsafe for doctor and
patient. Congressional reform of HCQIA is unlikely despite a doctor-shortage predicted to reach 200,
000 by 2020 (Dr. Richard Cooper, University of Pennsylvania.), but hospital boards can retain doctors with by-laws
respecting due process of law as stated in the Constitution, a document written "long ago in a land far, far away."
In American
business, people are typically fired on Friday afternoons at 4 P.M. A guard escorts them out of the building.
Sometimes the hard drive is removed from their computer, to protect the firm. There is no due process. However, people
can find work elsewhere, times permitting.
Pending
an amendment to HCQIA, think twice about whether you will be satisfied as a doctor in an impersonal corporate America:
Balance the debt you will accrue against the quality of the profession as it turns increasingly corporate, irrespective of
whether a private or public corporation controls it. Corporations controlled Congress when it wrote HCQIA in 1986.
They still do; that is the reason strongly to consider becoming a doctor in another English-speaking country than this one,
pending an amendment to HCQIA. Persons to contact over this issue are Senator Grassley and Ron Paul M.D.
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"Six of my cases were brought
up for review by a tissue committee controlled by competitors. A nurse (sic), employed by the Saint Francis Hospital, testified
that I had the highest rate of complication. Why such testimony was admitted is a
matter of some interest, in itself. Liability for bearing false witness is an important related matter, in itself, and
falls under the topic of immunity. Under our gracious new laws, I would not be able to win $500, 000 today were
a nurse again caught committing libel." Verner
S. Waite M.D., FACS
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| 1986: Dr. Waite won just before HCQIA: |
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| Such a career-defense is impossible now. Click picture. |
"Six of my cases were brought up for review by a tissue committee controlled by
competitors. A nurse (sic), employed by the
Saint Francis Hospital, testified that I had the highest rate of complication. Why such testimony was admitted
is a matter of some interest, in itself. Liability for bearing false witness is an important related matter, in itself,
and falls under the topic of immunity. Under
our gracious new laws, I would not be able to win $500, 000 today were a nurse again caught committing libel." Verner S. Waite M.D.,
FACS (Present value of $514,000 26 years later at 3.1% inflation = $ 1,136, 811.39.)
Dr. Verner S. Waite was a Roman Catholic who compared the collusive cover-up of molestation in his church to the collusiive
defamation of peer-review for-profit committees with "unclean hands." Under RICO, such defamatory collusion is racketeering.
He won over $500,000 in court in 1986, before Congress passed HCQIA: As he notes, he would not win today in the "Land of the
Free." Click here.
"There is no federal statute that requires peer review committees to
observe due process, which the Supreme Court has defined as (1) giving written notice of the actions contemplated,
(2) convening a hearing, (3) allowing both sides to present evidence at the hearing, and
(4) having an independent adjudicator (2). "
2. VITEK v. Jones
4. Not available.
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Due process as defined by the Supreme Court above may not suffice to protect physicians at peer-review:
1. No time to prepare
is specified;
2. No discovery is specified.
"There is no federal statute that requires peer review committees to observe due process, which the Supreme
Court has defined as (1) giving written notice of the actions contemplated, (2)
convening a hearing, (3) allowing both sides to present evidence at the hearing, and (4)
having an independent adjudicator ..."
"No man is an iland, intire of it selfe;
every man is a peece of the Continent, a part of the maine; if a clod bee washed away by the Sea,
Europe is the lesse, as well as if a Promontorie were, as well as if a Mannor of thy friends or
of thine owne were; any mans death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankinde; And therefore never send
to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee...." John Donne
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