Tuesday August 8 7:16 PM ET

Group Says 20,125 U.S. Doctors Are 'Questionable'

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A doctor who used a patient's amputated foot in
a crab trap and a surgeon who cut into the wrong side of a patient's brain
are among more than 20,000 U.S. doctors named as ``questionable'' by a
consumer's group on Tuesday.

Public Citizen said both doctors are still practicing medicine, along with
others who have been disciplined for offenses ranging from having sex with
patients to tax evasion.

The nonprofit group said patients have a right to know if their doctors have
been convicted of a crime and urged Congress to pass laws making such
information publicly available.

The 2000 edition of the book, published annually by Public Citizen, named
20,125 doctors and 28,000 actions against them.

``We found that well over 90 percent of them were very serious offenses,''
Dr. Sid Wolfe, head of Public Citizen's health research group, told a news
conference.

``Doctors who have been convicted of crimes, doctors who have sexually
abused patients ... doctors who misrepresent or over-prescribe drugs,''
Wolfe said.

``These, in my view ... are quite serious. Yet ... fewer than half the
disciplinary actions were serious. The majority of these doctors who were
disciplined for these serious offenses were never even temporarily taken
out of practice,'' Wolfe said.

The group said the National Practitioner Data Bank, which carries
information on medical malpractice lawsuits and disciplinary action for use
by state medical boards, health maintenance organizations and other
groups, should be open to all.

``These data belong to the public and should be made public,'' Wolfe said.

In March the U.S. House of Representatives Commerce Committee,
headed by Virginia Republican Rep. Thomas Bliley, held hearings on the
issue.

``He is going to introduce legislation in early September,'' a spokesman for
Bliley said. ``It will provide the information in context.''

The spokesman added, ``It is unconscionable that as consumers we have
more comparative information about the used car we purchase or the
snack foods we eat than the doctors in whose care we entrust our health
and well-being.''

The American Medical Association, which represents about 300,000 of the
nation's 700,000 doctors, opposes opening the database.

``It is inexcusable for the AMA to take the patronizing position that patients
won't really understand this information,'' Wolfe said.

But Dr. Thomas Reardon, immediate past president of the AMA, said there
are good reasons for keeping the database closed. ''The databank has just
the number of suits. It doesn't have any explanatory information,'' he said in
a telephone interview.

He said only one malpractice lawsuit in five was due to medical
negligence. ``If you don't have that type of information available then you
don't understand the information,'' he said.

``We support patients having good reliable valid information ... We think
there is a better way and that is for states at the state level, state medical
licensing boards ... to develop web sites for patients to have access to.''

Some of the doctors named by the group included:

-- Dr. Frederick E. Reed Jr. of Charleston, South Carolina who was fined
$3,000 and reprimanded for putting an amputated human foot into a crab
trap.

``You have to ask yourself would you like to go to this doctor?'' Wolfe said.

-- Dr. Bruce Copeland Raymon of Pensacola, Florida, who was fined
$6,000 and required to take five hours of additional medical education
after he cut open the wrong side of a patient's head.

``This is not adequate,'' Wolfe said.

-- Dr. Stephen Harrison Ware III of Corpus Christi, Texas, who had a 60-
month restriction placed on his license and who was required to get more
education after he contacted the state medical board and admitted to
having sexual relations with at least 16 patients.

``The restrictions don't stop this doctor from dating former patients,'' Wolfe
said. ``In my view the most horrendous breach of the doctor-patient
relationship is having sex with patients.''

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steve Wingate

Anomalous Images and UFO Files
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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