Australia, July 02, 2005
                             Adam Cresswell
                            Weekend Australian
                           
                            RIGHT now is not a great time to be an overseas-trained 
                            doctor in Australia. Following the furore over Queensland's 
                            so-called "Dr Death", Jayant Patel, some 
                            patients are turning away from other foreign-trained 
                            doctors, even though there is no evidence they 
                            are sub-standard.
                          The results of the audit of Patel's work, released 
                            by the Queensland Government this week, show Patel 
                            to have been much less of a monster than his diabolical 
                            moniker suggested.
                          Initially associated  and by implication, blamed 
                             for the deaths of 87 patients, the audit shows 
                            that he contributed to the deaths of just eight patients, 
                            four of whom were terminally ill. He contributed to 
                            adverse outcomes in 24 cases, and possibly another 
                            22, and his patient management was unreasonable in 
                            15 cases and possibly another 20.
                          But it's still a bad enough record, and one that 
                            raises questions over whether there are adequate systems 
                            in place in Australia to check up on doctors and hospitals, 
                            and whether they are clear and transparent  
                            transparent not just to the public, but to the profession 
                            itself.
                          Nor are these issues confined to Queensland. Questions 
                            have been raised in Western Australia, where an unidentified 
                            surgeon recorded 48 deaths among his patients in two 
                            and a half years.
                          The cases are quite different but there are common 
                            threads in the issues they raise. What systems are 
                            in place to detect and put a stop to rogue doctors, 
                            or poor hospital practices? Do they work? Is it clear 
                            to the profession and the public who should be doing 
                            what?
                          Most experts agree the answers to these questions 
                            are not all reassuring.
                          The Patel case is unique for the doctor's deception: 
                            as the Queensland Medical Board's report to state 
                            Health Minister Gordon Nuttall makes clear, Patel 
                            lied in his application for registration (denying 
                            registrations elsewhere had ever been restricted or 
                            cancelled), and removing an attachment from one document 
                            that revealed disciplinary action taken against him. 
                            The board  which in April hurriedly launched 
                            an audit of the credentials of all its 1670 other 
                            "special purpose" or overseas-trained doctors 
                            after the Patel allegations became public  has 
                            accepted responsibility for failing to spot the missing 
                            document.
                          But the other routine safety check that should have 
                            applied in the Patel case  a referral to the 
                            Australian Medical Council and thence the Royal Australasian 
                            College of Surgeons for assessment  did not 
                            happen.
                          Normally, in Queensland, a doctor who wants to practise 
                            as a surgeon must register specifically as a surgeon 
                             a process that would require him or her to 
                            be assessed by the RACS, the arbiter of standards 
                            for surgeons in Australia and New Zealand.
                          RACS executive director of surgical affairs John 
                            Quinn said Patel's application to the medical board 
                            was not as a surgeon, but as a medical officer, a 
                            much more junior doctor often only a few years out 
                            of medical school. After being appointed in this non-specialist 
                            capacity, he was then deemed by Queensland Health 
                            to be a surgeon, without reference to the college 
                            or the AMC, and later appointed director of surgery 
                            at Bundaberg Hospital.
                          Had the referral to the AMC and RACS happened, Quinn 
                            says Patel would have had to submit to a period of 
                            formal clinical supervision and reporting, which would 
                            have picked up the problems much sooner.
                          Bob Wells, a first assistant secretary in the federal 
                            Health Department until last year and now director 
                            of health policy and planning at the Australian National 
                            University, said the "pivotal role" given 
                            to the medical colleges should give the public confidence 
                            that the system was working well, but in this case 
                            it appeared the RACS had been bypassed. 
                          That's less likely to happen in future: the Beattie 
                            Government this week announced a major overhaul of 
                            the way overseas-trained doctors are accredited.
                          Instead of Queensland Health having the power to 
                            declare an "area of need"  a special 
                            status that allows for faster tracking of OTD applications 
                             this role would now go to the Office of Health 
                            Practitioner Registration Boards. This avoids the 
                            conflict with Queensland Health's role to ensure hospitals 
                            have enough doctors.
                          In future, overseas medical boards must send certification 
                            direct to the medical board (removing the opportunity 
                            for documents to be removed), incoming doctors must 
                            pass an exam from July 2006, and most will be supervised 
                            for one to threee months, receiving extra training 
                            if required. They will also have to pass the AMC exams, 
                            or gain fellowship of an Australian college within 
                            four years of their initial registration.
                          The Queensland Medical Board, which had been pushing 
                            for these reforms in its report on the Patel case, 
                            is also in talks with other state boards and the commonwealth 
                            in an attempt to standardise this approach in all 
                            jurisdictions.
                          Wells says the "increasing shortage"of 
                            doctors has created the pressure for doctors to be 
                            brought into the country quickly. A report recently 
                            issued by the Queensland Government confirms how bad 
                            this picture is: the number of doctors in the state 
                            per 100,000 people decreased from 236 in 1997 to 220 
                            in 2002. This week's audit of Patel's work criticised 
                            not just the doctor but also the standards of Bundaberg 
                            Hospital itself, where "amongst the medical staff, 
                            there was general acceptance of mediocrity of performance".
                          This raises wider issues, many of which are also 
                            relevant to the case in WA of the unnamed surgeon 
                            linked to 48 patient deaths.
                          While that seems a high figure, many doctors  
                            anaesthetists, assisting surgeons, and so on  
                            would have been involved in many of the 48 cases, 
                            making it impossible to say whose fault, if anyone's, 
                            any of the deaths were.
                          More importantly, the deaths are recorded if they 
                            happen within 30 days of surgery, and could be due 
                            to any cause  and could merely reflect the patient's 
                            poor prognosis or a deterioration in their condition 
                            post-surgery. It could also reflect the fact that 
                            the surgeon was working in a very high-risk area, 
                            or was a well-regarded surgeon who attracted the most 
                            difficult cases.
                          An RACS committee conducting the audit in WA is investigating 
                            the case, but in the meantime Quinn says the deaths 
                            could be due to what is known as "system failures" 
                             for example, a delay in obtaining a crucial 
                            scan or test due to rostering schedules of relevant 
                            staff. In such cases a death might be linked to a 
                            particular surgeon even though he or she bore no responsibility 
                            for the patient's death.
                          Director-general of WA Health Neale Fong admits he 
                            does not know who the surgeon is, but says he is nonetheless 
                            satisfied "there is not another Patel out there" 
                            because of the other checks and balances in place.
                          These include the fact that every major hospital 
                            has mortality and morbidity committees, and all surgical 
                            deaths are scrutinised by two independent clinicians 
                            for issues of concern.
                          However, WA is addressing another area of concern. 
                            The WA surgeon came to light as part of a state-wide 
                            audit of surgical mortality conducted by the RACS 
                            in partnership with the WA Government. The surgeon 
                            declined to voluntarily provide reports on his mortality 
                            rates  a situation Fong says will not be allowed 
                            in future.
                          Co-operation with surgical audits was already a condition 
                            of employment for all new staff doctors, and the condition 
                            would now be progressively introduced for existing 
                            staff as contracts came up for renewal, he said.
                          RACS president Russell Stitz says the surgical audit 
                            program is now being rolled out nationally, and should 
                            bring big improvements in patient care  as achieved 
                            by a similar program in Scotland  by identifying 
                            quality issues in the bigger picture. For example, 
                            this might mean routinely ensuring patients were given 
                            drugs before surgery to reduce the risk of blood clots.
                          What Fong, Stitz, Wells and many others oppose is 
                            the publication of "league tables"  
                            data that ranks individual doctors according to their 
                            surgical outcomes, including the numbers of their 
                            patients who die.
                          Wells says that far from helping the public, such 
                            information would probably be misleading. "I'm 
                            not particularly in favour of league tables  
                            particularly for things like surgery, if there are 
                            problems it won't always be the surgeon, it's because 
                            they perform as a team. It could be a whole lot of 
                            factors. And some surgeons tend to do more difficult 
                            work than other surgeons, either because of where 
                            they practise or the type of procedure they do. It's 
                            a bit hard to convey all those subtleties in a simple 
                            league table . . . I think therefore it's a bit misleading 
                            for the public."