Professional Standards for Specialist Medical Administrators: Over-the-top Downunder?

J Law Med. 2024 May;31(1):122-129.

Abstract

In Australia, there are only two publicly reported disciplinary cases against specialist medical administrators. In the most recent decision of Medical Board of Australia v Gruner, the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal confirmed that specialist medical administrators owe patients and the public the same professional obligations as medical practitioners with direct patient contact. More controversially, the Tribunal also held that medical administrators have a professional obligation only to accept roles with clear position descriptions that afford them sufficient time and resources to ensure the safe delivery of health services. We argue that this imposes unrealistic expectations on medical administrators engaged by rural, regional, or private health services that already struggle to attract and retain specialist medical expertise. This may exacerbate existing health inequalities by disincentivising specialist medical administrators from seeking fractional appointments that assist under-funded areas of workforce shortage.

Keywords: disciplinary processes; duties of care; ethical responsibilities; medical administrators; regulation.

Publication types

  • Legal Case

MeSH terms

  • Australia
  • Humans
  • Physician Executives*
  • Specialization