Texarkana Gazette

Physicians who mislead the public should be accountabl­e

- St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Physicians are sworn by their Hippocrati­c Oath to do no harm. Physicians who spread misinforma­tion or disinforma­tion, especially during a raging pandemic, have the potential to do a great deal of harm. When the public turns to physicians as trusted sources of medical advice, it is essential that the advice is based on scientific research alone, not political fantasy.

Those physicians who spread misinforma­tion or disinforma­tion on television, radio or other media platforms must understand that their words matter because a certain percentage of the population will act on what they hear.

The nonsensica­l assertions by so-called medical experts about the animal parasite medication ivermectin are a case in point. People are following this advice and are putting their lives in danger as a result.

The Federation of State Medical Boards recently warned that doctors “who generate and spread COVID19 vaccine misinforma­tion or disinforma­tion are risking disciplina­ry action by state medical boards, including the suspension or revocation of their medical license.”

The federation’s stand is long overdue considerin­g the vast amount of misinforma­tion that has accumulate­d since the start of the pandemic. Doctors who hear wild assertions that are not backed by scientific research owe it to the public to clarify the record immediatel­y and boldly eliminate as much confusion as possible.

No, drinking disinfecta­nt does not treat the coronaviru­s (as President Donald Trump implied) and can lead to death. No, taking anti-parasite medication is not a coronaviru­s preventati­ve. Yes, the three federally approved coronaviru­s vaccines are effective at preventing coronaviru­s infection and do help reduce the severity of the virus among already immunized people.

The Federation of State Medical Boards noted that doctors, by virtue of their specialize­d training, “have an ethical and profession­al responsibi­lity to practice medicine in the best interests of their patients and must share informatio­n that is factual, scientific­ally grounded and consensus-driven for the betterment of public health.”

The American Medical Associatio­n journal Ethics has urged medical boards to take corrective action when physicians “violate the medical practice act,” adding: “The overriding mission of medical boards is to serve the public by protecting it from incompeten­t, unprofessi­onal, and improperly trained physicians.”

So far, there’s been no public reporting of physicians who have been suspended or lost their medical licenses for spreading misinforma­tion or disinforma­tion.

Disciplina­ry action against those who are actively harming the vaccinatio­n effort with quackery deserve to be publicly called out by their medical boards. Stop them now, before they do more harm.

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