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Is Clinician Refusal to Treat an Emerging Problem in Injury Compensation Systems?

Overview
Journal BMJ Open
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2016 Jan 22
PMID 26792215
Citations 15
Authors
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Abstract

Objective: The reasons that doctors may refuse or be reluctant to treat have not been widely explored in the medical literature. To understand the ethical implications of reluctance to treat there is a need to recognise the constraints of doctors working in complex systems and to consider how these constraints may influence reluctance. The aim of this paper is to illustrate these constraints using the case of compensable injury in the Australian context.

Design: Between September and December 2012, a qualitative investigation involving face-to-face semistructured interviews examined the knowledge, attitudes and practices of general practitioners (GPs) facilitating return to work in people with compensable injuries.

Setting: Compensable injury management in general practice in Melbourne, Australia.

Participants: 25 GPs who were treating, or had treated a patient with compensable injury.

Results: The practice of clinicians refusing treatment was described by all participants. While most GPs reported refusal to treat among their colleagues in primary and specialist care, many participants also described their own reluctance to treat people with compensable injuries. Reasons offered included time and financial burdens, in addition to the clinical complexities involved in compensable injury management.

Conclusions: In the case of compensable injury management, reluctance and refusal to treat is likely to have a domino effect by increasing the time and financial burden of clinically complex patients on the remaining clinicians. This may present a significant challenge to an effective, sustainable compensation system. Urgent research is needed to understand the extent and implications of reluctance and refusal to treat and to identify strategies to engage clinicians in treating people with compensable injuries.

Citing Articles

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Time to Service and Its Relationship with Outcomes in Workers with Compensated Musculoskeletal Conditions: A Scoping Review.

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Using general practitioners with an extended role in spinal practice for the initial assessment of patients referred to spinal surgeons: preliminary experience and challenges.

Whittle I, Yull D, Yee J, Czechowicz G, Murphy P, Clausen E Prim Health Care Res Dev. 2023; 24:e9.

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Primary Care Physicians' Learning Needs in Returning Ill or Injured Workers to Work. A Scoping Review.

Furlan A, Harbin S, Vieira F, Irvin E, Severin C, Nowrouzi-Kia B J Occup Rehabil. 2022; 32(4):591-619.

PMID: 35511378 DOI: 10.1007/s10926-022-10043-w.


Framing the Care of Injured Workers: An Empirical Four-Jurisdictional Comparison of Workers' Compensation Boards' Healthcare Policies.

Hudon A, Maceachen E, Lippel K J Occup Rehabil. 2022; 32(2):170-189.

PMID: 35038105 DOI: 10.1007/s10926-021-10021-8.


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