Toronto Star

‘Room to improve’ on tracking doctors

People have a right to ‘as much transparen­cy as possible’ about physicians’ history: health minister

- RACHEL MENDLESON AND DIANA ZLOMISLIC INVESTIGAT­IVE REPORTERS

Ontario Health Minister Helena Jaczek says the province’s medical watchdog should provide patients with “as full a picture” as possible of physicians’ disciplina­ry and criminal histories after a Star investigat­ion found the public is being deprived of informatio­n about sanctions imposed in other jurisdicti­ons.

“Obviously, I’m in favour of as much transparen­cy as possible,” Jaczek said in an interview at Queen’s Park on Thursday. “I think that people have a right to know.”

The Star’s 18-month investigat­ion identified 159 discipline­d doctors who have held licences on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border, and used public records to piece together their disciplina­ry histories across provincial, state and country lines. Ninety per cent of these doctors’ public profiles in Canada failed to fully report sanctions taken against them for a range of offences, including incompeten­ce, improper prescribin­g, sexual misconduct and fraud, the investigat­ion found.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO), the self-regulating body that oversees the province’s doctors, recently amended its bylaws to allow it to post some informatio­n about discipline imposed in other jurisdicti­ons on its physician profiles.

However, the college only posts sanctions imposed on Ontario doctors outside the province after Sept. 1, 2015.

Jaczek said the disciplina­ry informatio­n on the college’s website should be “retrospect­ive.”

“If a physician has committed an offence in another jurisdicti­on previously, say, in the U.S., I don’t know why we couldn’t add that,” she said. “Obviously, the longevity of a (physician’s career) could go back 40 years, so one would want as full a picture as you could get.”

Considerin­g the relatively small number of cross-border doctors with disciplina­ry histories, Jaczek said, “the workload in terms of importing that data wouldn’t be that onerous.”

“I think it does require a little more of a conversati­on potentiall­y between the ministry and the CPSO as to whether they could enhance that website,” she said. “I think there is room to improve.”

Jaczek said she won’t have an opportunit­y to discuss her concerns with the college before the June 7 election, but said the issue is “certainly on an agenda should we return.”

Speaking to reporters at a transit event in Etobicoke on Thursday, Premier Kathleen Wynne said the province has worked with the CPSO to improve oversight “but, in terms of the transparen­cy, I think that is the question.

“I think we need to ask … is there more that needs to be done in terms of people’s ability to get informatio­n?” Wynne said.

NDP health critic France Gélinas said greater transparen­cy by the CPSO should have been “mandated long ago.”

“The health minister must demand the physicians’ college posts all disciplina­ry measures that have happened to any of their members, no matter what jurisdicti­on it’s from,” she said. “We know full well that physicians move. The CPSO is there to protect the public. People expect that. Let’s meet people’s expectatio­ns.”

Earlier this week, Alberta’s health minister pledged to work with her province’s medical college to post informatio­n about sanctions imposed on its doctors by regulators in other jurisdicti­ons. Sarah Hoffman also said she would review the college’s current practice of scrubbing all disciplina­ry details from doctors’ online pro- files after five years.

Unlike in the U.S., Canada has no national agency that collects and disseminat­es licensing and disciplina­ry informatio­n on doctors.

The Star’s investigat­ion found some Canadian physicians’ colleges keep secret basic informatio­n readily disclosed by other regulators. Quebec’s college, for example, told the Star that a physicians’ credential­s — when and where they graduated from medical school — is confidenti­al informatio­n. The secrecy of Canadian colleges is in sharp contrast to their counterpar­ts in the U.S., where consumer legislatio­n governs many medical boards and mandates openness.

Jaczek said there should be more “consistenc­y” between medical regulators across Canada in terms of making disciplina­ry informatio­n public.

“I think it would be something that if I should be in this position (after the election) I would bring to that federal-provincial­territoria­l table,” she said.

“The CPSO is there to protect the public. People expect that. Let’s meet people’s expectatio­ns.” FRANCE GÉLINAS NDP HEALTH CRITIC

With files from Marco Oved Chown and Robert Cribb

 ??  ??
 ?? VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ??
VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada