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Sexual misconduct by health professionals in Australia, 2011–2016: a retrospective analysis of notifications to health regulators
Author(s) -
Bismark Marie M,
Studdert David M,
Morton Katinka,
Paterson Ron,
Spittal Matthew J,
Taouk Yamna
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
medical journal of australia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.904
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1326-5377
pISSN - 0025-729X
DOI - 10.5694/mja2.50706
Subject(s) - sexual misconduct , harassment , misconduct , medicine , family medicine , health care , agency (philosophy) , specialty , nursing , psychology , criminology , political science , law , philosophy , epistemology
Abstract Objectives To assess the numbers of notifications to health regulators alleging sexual misconduct by registered health practitioners in Australia, by health care profession. Design, setting Retrospective cohort study; analysis of Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency and NSW Health Professional Councils Authority data on notifications of sexual misconduct during 2011–2016. Participants All registered practitioners in 15 health professions. Main outcome measures Notification rates (per 10 000 practitioner‐years) and adjusted rate ratios ( aRR s) by age, sex, profession, medical specialty, and practice location. Results Regulators received 1507 sexual misconduct notifications for 1167 of 724 649 registered health practitioners (0.2%), including 208 practitioners (18%) who were the subjects of more than one report during 2011–2016; 381 notifications (25%) alleged sexual relationships, 1126 (75%) sexual harassment or assault. Notifications regarding sexual relationships were more frequent for psychiatrists (15.2 notifications per 10 000 practitioner‐years), psychologists (5.0 per 10 000 practitioner‐years), and general practitioners (6.4 per 10 000 practitioner‐years); the rate was higher for regional/rural than metropolitan practitioners ( aRR , 1.73; 95% CI , 1.31–2.30). Notifications of sexual harassment or assault more frequently named male than female practitioners ( aRR , 37.1; 95% CI , 26.7–51.5). A larger proportion of notifications of sexual misconduct than of other forms of misconduct led to regulatory sanctions (242 of 709 closed cases [34%] v 5727 of 23 855 [24%]). Conclusions While notifications alleging sexual misconduct by health practitioners are rare, such misconduct has serious consequences for patients, practitioners, and the community. Further efforts are needed to prevent sexual misconduct in health care and to ensure thorough investigation of alleged misconduct.