Unprofessional Conduct in Healthcare: Why It Matters to Us
Unprofessional behaviors exhibited by healthcare workers correlate with increased risk for patient complications and malpractice claims; such behaviors can also signal issues with a healthcare provider’s overall well-being.
Researchers investigated a cohort of more than 35,000 physicians across 193 hospitals for a history of reports submitted to the Coworker Concern Observation Reporting System (CORS) from 2018 to 2022.
What the study found:
9.1% of physicians had a history of at least one CORS report (note that most physicians had no CORS reports on record); only 1% had repeated CORS reports indicating a pattern of unprofessional behavior.
Top 3 specialties with a history of at least one CORS report:
Surgeons
Nonsurgeon proceduralists
Emergency medicine physicians
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Physicians in a pediatric-focused specialty were the least likely to have any CORS reports
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Most common CORS reports included one or more complaints regarding:
Communication – 79%
Responsibility – 48%
Medical care – 20%
Professional integrity – 15%
The findings make me wonder…
Would these findings similarly apply to APPs working in surgical and pediatric specialties?
Does the high-stress environment of surgery excuse any unprofessional behaviors?
Cooper WO, Hickson GB, Dmochowski RR, et al. Physician specialty differences in unprofessional behaviors observed and reported by coworkers. JAMA Netw Open. 2024;7(6):e2415331. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.15331