BOSTON GLOBE EDITORIAL: DUE DILIGENCE ON DOCTORS --
The Senate should explore whether growing wartime
demand for
VA facilities has caused officials to lower their
standards in hiring,
especially at small, rural hospitals like the one
in Marion.

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http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial
_opinion/editorials/articles/2007/11/05/due_diligence_on_doctors/
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Globe Editorial
Due diligence on doctors
THE COUNTRY has a porous system for protecting patients from unfit
doctors. That much is clear from the case of a Massachusetts surgeon under
scrutiny for botched operations here, who went on to be investigated for
possible malpractice in Illinois. The fact that the surgeon, Dr. Jose
Veizaga- Mendez, found work at a Veterans Affairs hospital has also raised
questions about how carefully the VA is screening applicants as it staffs
hard-to-fill positions in rural hospitals.
Illinois's two senators, Democrats Richard Durbin and Barack Obama, have
called for a hearing on the case by the Veterans Affairs Committee
tomorrow. The senators should scrutinize the hiring practices of the VA as
well as the national databanks on disciplined doctors maintained by the US
Department of Health and Human Services.
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Veizaga-Mendez landed his job at the VA hospital
in Marion, Ill., in January 2006, while under investigation by the
Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine. This January, the board
charged him with eight instances of substandard care at a hospital in
Attleboro. But because the case was just in the investigative stage with
information still kept confidential, VA officials in Illinois learned
nothing from the Massachusetts board about Veizaga-Mendez's problems. Now
the VA, alerted by a surgical quality surveillance system it maintains, is
investigating his role in the deaths of up to 10 patients since he started
working there, including a 50-year-old Air Force veteran who died in
August after what was expected to be routine gallbladder surgery.
The most direct solution to the loophole that Veizaga-Mendez took
advantage of would be to have state regulatory boards report to the
databanks as the boards begin an investigation. The potential downside to
such early publicizing of an investigation is that it could keep a
doctor's colleagues or superiors from bringing concerns to the state
boards. The senators should spur the operators of the databanks and the
state regulatory boards to come up with a reporting mechanism that gets
information to the databanks in a timely way without discouraging the
reporting of possible misconduct by physicians.
While information from the Massachusetts board was not in the databanks
when the VA hospital hired Veizaga-Mendez, officials there did know about
other red flags in his record. The VA has reassigned four administrators
at the Marion hospital while it conducts its own investigation. The Senate
should explore whether growing wartime demand for VA facilities has caused
officials to lower their standards in hiring, especially at small, rural
hospitals like the 55-bed one in Marion. No patients - and especially not
patients who have served their nation - should face the risk of being
treated by physicians who have fled disciplinary action in another state.
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Larry Scott --
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