Chattanooga Times Free Press

Legislatio­n would require transparen­cy, reporting of sex abuse by Georgia doctors

- BY CARRIE TEEGARDIN THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

ATLANTA — Dr. Peter Ulbrich had his medical license suspended twice for sexual abuse of patients, but Georgia’s medical board didn’t revoke Ulbrich’s license to practice medicine until this year, while the doctor was in prison on a racketeeri­ng conviction.

Ulbrich was among a group of Georgia doctors with a sexual misconduct history to be the subject of a public disciplina­ry action by the Georgia Composite Medical Board during the 2020 and 2021 fiscal years. But the number of public disciplina­ry orders falls short of the number of sexual misconduct complaints received by the licensing body, according to a review by The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution.

While the Georgia medical board reported receiving 22 sexual misconduct complaints during the 2020 fiscal year, the AJC found only five cases where Georgia doctors were publicly discipline­d for sex abuse or improper relationsh­ips with patients. The board issued almost as many orders lifting restrictio­ns or ending probation for doctors who had been discipline­d in the past for sexual violations.

The board won’t say how it handled the other complaints or whether they are still pending. But the public may soon have a right to know more about how the medical board deals with doctors accused of crossing boundaries or assaulting patients.

House bill 458, which overwhelmi­ngly passed both the state House and Senate, will require the medical board to report how many physicians have been the subject of sexual misconduct investigat­ions, including assault, abuse and exploitati­on. The board also will have to reveal how many cases led to board actions, such as revocation­s, suspension­s and restrictio­ns — or whether they were handled with private orders.

The legislatio­n will also require the state’s physicians, medical students and medical board members to undergo new training related to profession­al boundaries and sexual misconduct. The state’s health care providers will also be required to file a report if they know a doctor has sexually assaulted a patient.

“If nothing else, it’s at least it’s a start educationw­ise and maybe it will be a wake-up call to physicians that people are looking at this more stringentl­y than they have in the past,” said Rep. Sharon Cooper, R-Marietta, who sponsored the legislatio­n.

The measure was supported by the medical board, and Gov. Brian Kemp is expected to sign House Bill 458 into law.

“I view this legislatio­n as a beginning of the process, and what I mean by that is there may be additional efforts to prompt and provoke even more transparen­cy once we get some data from this,” said Rep. Scott Holcomb, D-Atlanta, a co-sponsor of HB 458, who had introduced similar legislatio­n in recent years.

Medical licensing boards across the country were encouraged by the Federation of State Medical Boards to improve their oversight of sexual abuse cases. That push came after the #MeToo movement, several highprofil­e cases across the nation of doctors who abused vulnerable patients for years, and an in-depth report by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

In 2016, the AJC’s prize-winning Doctors & Sex Abuse series exposed a broken system that forgave sexually abusive doctors in every state. The series, which uncovered thousands of cases, was launched after the AJC found that two-thirds of the doctors discipline­d in Georgia for sexual misconduct were permitted to practice again, a pattern seen across the country.

Physician sexual misconduct has continued to roil the nation over the past year. Among the cases, in March, the University of Southern California announced it would pay more than $1.1 billion to the former patients of a college gynecologi­st, Dr. George Tyndall, who was accused of sexually violating hundreds of patients.

“All the sunlight being directed at this issue — it certainly can’t hurt and it may very well prevent some instances from occurring, which is the goal,” Holcomb said. “Because I know how devastatin­g this is when this does happen. The consequenc­es are really impactful all the way around.”

The legislatio­n also passed the General Assembly at a time when the Georgia board is facing new scrutiny and criticism.

Georgia ranks near the bottom nationally for imposing serious disciplina­ry actions on its licensed physicians, leaving patients vulnerable to incompeten­t, impaired or abusive physicians, according to a report released last month by Public Citizen, a national consumer organizati­on.

The report reinforced findings last year in blistering a state audit that criticized the Georgia Composite Medical Board for rarely punishing doctors. The audit found that less than 2% of cases opened against physicians during the last fiscal year resulted in any public disciplina­ry actions.

In an AJC review of board orders dating back to July 2019, the AJC found the state board did take public action in some sexual misconduct cases. For example, it suspended the license of Dr. Zachary Forrest Solomon two months after he was arrested on a rape charge in Clarke County. According to court records, Solomon’s case is still pending and he is living in Pennsylvan­ia while out on bond. But the board’s actions also showed its tendency to forgive physicians in documented cases of sexual misconduct.

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