Mandatory reports of concerns about the health, performance and conduct of health practitioners

Objective: To describe the frequency and characteristics of mandatory reports about the health, competence and conduct of registered health practitioners in Australia. Design and setting: Retrospective review and multivariate analysis of allegations of “notifiable conduct” involving health practitio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical journal of Australia 2014-10, Vol.201 (7), p.399-403
Hauptverfasser: Bismark, Marie M, Spittal, Matthew J, Plueckhahn, Tessa M, Studdert, David M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: To describe the frequency and characteristics of mandatory reports about the health, competence and conduct of registered health practitioners in Australia. Design and setting: Retrospective review and multivariate analysis of allegations of “notifiable conduct” involving health practitioners received by the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) between 1 November 2011 and 31 December 2012. Main outcome measures: Statutory grounds for reports, types of behaviour reported, and incidence of notifications by profession, sex, age, jurisdiction and geographic area. Results: Of 819 mandatory notifications made during the study period, 501 (62%) related to perceived departures from accepted professional standards, mostly standards of clinical care. Nurses and doctors dominated notifications: 89% (727/819) involved a doctor or nurse in the role of notifier and/or respondent. Health professionals other than the respondents' treating practitioners made 46% of notifications (335/731), and the profession of the notifier and respondent was the same in 80% of cases (557/697). Employers made 46% of notifications (333/731). Psychologists had the highest rate of notifications, followed by medical practitioners, and then nurses and midwives (47, 41 and 40 reports per 10 000 practitioners per year, respectively). Incidence of notifications against men was more than two‐and‐a‐half times that for women (46 v 17 reports per 10 000 practitioners per year; P 
ISSN:0025-729X
1326-5377
DOI:10.5694/mja14.00210