Disciplinary Action by Medical Boards and Prior Behavior in Medical School
San Francisco VA Medical Center · University of California, San Francisco · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Evidence supporting professionalism as a critical measure of competence in medical education is limited. In this case-control study, we investigated the association of disciplinary action against practicing physicians with prior unprofessional behavior in medical school. We also examined the specific types of behavior that are most predictive of disciplinary action against practicing physicians with unprofessional behavior in medical school.
The study included 235 graduates of three medical schools who were disciplined by one of 40 state medical boards between 1990 and 2003 (case physicians). The 469 control physicians were matched with the case physicians according to medical school and graduation year. Predictor variables from medical school included the presence or absence of narratives describing unprofessional behavior, grades, standardized-test scores, and demographic characteristics. Narratives were assigned an overall rating for unprofessional behavior. Those that met the threshold for unprofessional behavior were further classified among eight types of behavior and assigned a severity rating (moderate to severe).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 40.03
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Action (physics)
- Medical school
- Medical education
- Discipline
- Family medicine
- Law
- No poverty