Alberta doctors accused of spreading COVID-19 misinformation face unannounced inspections
The regulator of Alberta's doctors is performing unannounced inspections at medical clinics in a bid to crack down on doctors who spread COVID-19 misinformation or prescribe unproven remedies for the disease.
The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta (CPSA) said it has conducted five inspections related to COVID-19 complaints since targeted enforcement began three weeks ago.
In a statement to CBC News on Thursday, the regulator said the five cases are at various stages in the investigative process, but it declined to provide further details on the allegations.
The CPSA announced its plan to increase enforcement in a memo issued on Oct. 14.
As opponents of vaccinations, vaccine passports, masking and physical distancing became more vocal, regulatory bodies in other provinces started investigating complaints about doctors providing misinformation on COVID-19, but Alberta's use of unannounced inspections is unusual, one expert says.
False exemptions, unproven remediesThe statement detailed how inspectors would arrive, without warning, at medical practices where doctors have been subject to COVID-related complaints.
If doctors refuse an inspection, the college has the authority to apply to the Alberta Court of Queen's Bench for a court order.
"We have not encountered the need to seek a court order to force a physician to co-operate with an inspection at this point," the statement said.
The college said it is "very concerned" about the increasing number of doctors reportedly violating the CPSA's standards of practice and pandemic-related public health orders.
"An on-site inspection may occur when â" but is not limited to â" allegations arise of inappropriate issuance of COVID-19 vaccine and/or mask-exemption letters, prescribing inappropriate interventions such as ivermectin for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19 and spreading of misinformation related to COVID-19," the college said.
The province's Health Professions Act gives the college the authority to conduct unannounced site inspections to investigate possible breaches of CPSA's standards of practice.
Inspectors can question witnesses under oath and gain access to documents, including medical charts, as well as substances such as medical samples.
Formal investigations that find standards are breached are turned over to a discipline tribunal to determine guilt and penalty. Penalties include restrictions on a doctor's ability to practise, suspension or loss of a physician's practice permit, a fine or a mandate for additional training.
"The actions of a very vocal few have done a lot of damage.- Dr. Vesta Michelle Warren, AMA presidentIn some cases, an inspection may not be necessary to trigger disciplinary action.
If there is blatant evidence, such as video recordings or social media posts "where physicians publicly attack other physicians" or "egregiously spread misinformation," the case will be directly referred to the CPSA's professional conduct department, the college said.
Alberta Medical Association president Dr. Vesta Michelle Warren said the vast majority of Alberta doctors have nothing to hide from the regulator and support the new measures.
"The actions of a very vocal few have done a lot of damage," she said. "We need to condemn, in the strongest of terms, the promotion of anti-vaccination propaganda by health-care providers."
The danger of misinformation 'heroes'The move is unusual, said Lorian Hardcastle, an associate professor in the faculty of law at the University of Calgary, with a cross-appointment to the Cumming School of Medicine.
She said this is the first time she's heard of a physicians' college taking this measure, adding that the CPSA's new enforcement strategy is part of a larger crackdown on COVID-19 misinformation among doctors.
Lorian Hardcastle, an associate professor at the University of Calgary's faculty of law, says a small minority of defiant doctors has an oversized impact on public health by eroding trust in proven science and the government response to the pandemic. (Colin Hall/CBC)Canada's medical regulators are taking on a stronger enforcement role, while attempting to distance themselves from the "dissenters," Hardcastle said.
"If they allow certain members to become voices of the anti-vaccine, anti-mask movement, then they're failing at their duty to protect the public. This shows that they're taking that mandate seriously."
Their voices can tend to be amplified over the voices of the thousands and thousands of physicians who are pro-mask and pro-vaccine.- Lorian Hardcastle, University of CalgaryHardcastle said a small minority of defiant doctors has an oversized impact on public health by eroding trust in proven science and the government response to the pandemic.
"Those individuals tend to become sort of heroes to the anti-vax movement," she said.
"They become these public figures, and their voices can tend to be amplified over the voices of the thousands and thousands of physicians who are pro-mask and pro-vaccine."
Doctors who oppose public health orders may also harm public health by attracting like-minded patients, Hardcastle said. She said doctors who publicly oppose COVID-19 restrictions may be sought out by people who want false exemption papers.
The threat of inspections will likely dissuade some doctors "on the fence" from breaking the rules, but Hardcastle said she suspects some may hold firm.
"It's difficult to know how effective it will be at targeting those people who are really the problem."
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