Montreal Gazette

Psychiatri­sts discipline­d more than MDS: study

- TOM BLACKWELL

Psychiatri­sts are twice as likely as other Canadian doctors to face profession­al discipline generally and almost four times as apt to be sanctioned for sexual misconduct, concludes a new study that underscore­s long-held concerns about the specialty.

Experts blame the problem in part on psychiatri­sts’ unusually close and long relationsh­ips with their patients compared with surgeons and some other specialist­s who often have relatively brief contact with the people they treat.

Past research has suggested many of the wayward therapists may also be “lovesick,” middle-aged men in isolated practices who fall for younger women, the study notes.

Regardless, the new analysis of a decade of discipline cases across Canada more than confirmed anecdotal evidence and a previous study that suggested a problem with psychiatry, said Dr. Chaim Bell of Toronto’s Mt. Sinai Hospital, who co-wrote the paper.

“This is surprising in how consistent it is across the various provinces, how consistent it is in different years, and how consistent it is with penalties and fines,” he said. “It’s also consistent with the sort of sensationa­l, one-type anecdotal coverage you might get. … The (discipline case) that gets the front page is often the psychiatri­st.”

This month, at least two psychiatri­sts have been in the news for sexual-abuse allegation­s. A London, Ont. doctor under investigat­ion by the Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons for allegedly masturbati­ng and inappropri­ately videotapin­g female patients was charged by police with sexual assault and voyeurism. In Calgary, meanwhile, a psychiatri­st is being tried on charges of sexually assaulting 10 male patients.

Bell, an internal-medicine specialist, stressed that it is still a small percentage of psychiatri­sts — about two per thousand — who get in trouble with their regulatory colleges. Given the “catastroph­ic” effect even rare cases of misconduct can have on patients and the public trust, however, psychiatry must do more to curb wrongdoing, the study’s authors say.

At the same time, the average psychiatri­st who faced discipline over the 10-year study period had been practising for more than 30 years, perhaps reflecting a shrinking generation of practition­er, said Dr. Molyn Leszcz, Mt. Sinai’s chief of psychiatry.

Younger psychiatri­sts have been exposed to training on appropriat­e boundaries with patients, are more conscienti­ous about their own emotional health and actually do their jobs differentl­y, said Leszcz, who was not involved in the study. They are more likely to practise with groups of other doctors and spend less time in one-on-one psychother­apy sessions, he said.

A 1997 Canadian study that followed a group of new psychiatri­sts over time concluded that the two who were eventually convicted of sexual abusing patients had identifiab­le personalit­y problems even while still in training.

That raises the “ethically challengin­g” prospect of screening medical students for sexually exploitati­ve tendencies before they are assigned to specialty training, the new study noted.

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